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Burra, Neera – International Labour Review, 1989
Suggests that male and female working children are treated differently in India. Girls are destined for marriage whereas boys are educated so they can support their parents in their old age. Current legislation and policy on child labor need to be reformed. (JOW)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Females, Foreign Countries, Labor Legislation
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Hilowitz, Janet – International Labour Review, 1997
Social labels, which inform consumers about the social conditions under which an item or service was produced, can contribute to elimination of child labor. Effective use requires a sympathetic public, cooperation from retail stores, and adequate financing. (SK)
Descriptors: Business Responsibility, Child Labor, Child Welfare, Codes of Ethics
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Swepston, Lee – International Labour Review, 1982
This article reviews the International Labour Organisation's standard-setting activities to combat or regulate child labor (fixing of a minimum age for employment or work, establishment of the conditions under which children may work); discusses the means of enforcing standards; and describes the situation in practice. (CT)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Compliance (Legal), Federal Legislation, Labor Legislation
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Myers, William E. – International Labour Review, 1989
The results of four field surveys of urban working children in Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, and Peru are compared. The article focuses on children working in the streets, discussing their occupations, earnings, family situation, education, aspirations, and needs. (SK)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Educational Attainment, Family Characteristics
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Gunn, Susan E.; Ostos, Zenaida – International Labour Review, 1992
Describes child labor in the Philippines and two responses to the needs of child scavengers: the Drop In Center, which provided health, social, and employment services to children and their families, and SABANA, a sheltered learning place for child workers. (JOW)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Child Welfare, Foreign Countries, Health Services
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Ratner, Ronnie Steinberg – International Labour Review, 1980
The author focuses on laws governing maximum working hours, explaining how their coverage became restricted to women and children and how organized labor showed renewed interest in universal hour laws during the Depression. She advances three hypotheses to explain how laws that once were protective became restrictive. (CT)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Discriminatory Legislation, Employed Women, Labor Conditions
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Schneider de Villegas, Gisela – International Labour Review, 1990
Wage work done at home has existed for more than a century. It is performed mainly by women and the disabled and can be a concealed form of child labor. This article examines the main aspects of the subject and advocates increased legal protection. (JOW)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Disabilities, Federal Legislation, Females
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Bonnet, Michel – International Labour Review, 1993
The question of child labor in Africa is complicated by the failures of the educational system, family relations, traditional forms of apprenticeship, proliferation of the informal economic sector, and continuing existence of a rural economy. Hazardous working conditions prevail. (SK)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Foreign Countries, Labor Legislation
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Bequele, Assefa; Boyden, Jo – International Labour Review, 1988
Examines the types of employment children are most frequently engaged in, the risks involved, earnings, relationship between work and school, and the constraints on the exercise of their rights. Discusses initiatives underway to protect child workers, meet their needs, and formulate government policy. (JOW)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Childrens Rights, Developing Nations
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Rodgers, Gerry; Standing, Guy – International Labour Review, 1981
Proposes a classification into nine categories of children's work activities in low-income countries. Considers the structural determinants of child work and its principal economic consequences. Critically assesses the potential role of labor and welfare policies in reducing, if not eliminating child labor. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Economic Climate, Economic Factors
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Anker, Richard – International Labour Review, 2000
Provides a conceptual framework within which to measure the economic aspects of child labor. Outlines reasons for concern and explains how child labor is defined and measured. Discusses policy and program implications. (Contains 45 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Developing Nations, Economic Factors