The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age Convention and the Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention. Such conventions aim at the reduction and eventual elimination of harmful labour practices. After the ratification of such conventions, many countries have adopted domestic laws prohibiting harmful labour. Despite such regulations, statistics prove that children still participate in harmful work. The main purpose of this article is to assess the ILO child labour conventions critically, so as to provide further understanding of the provisions of the text of such instruments. While the aim of the Minimum Age Convention was the progressive eradication of child labour, the Worst Forms of C...
In 2012, Bahrain made a minimal advancement in efforts to eliminate the worst forms of child labor. ...
Child labour has always been one of the core concerns of the International Labour Organisation (ILO)...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to call for re-thinking of the universal minimum-age approach...
The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age C...
The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age C...
The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age C...
Despite humanity's considerable efforts to stop it child labour remains a global problem. In the int...
Despite humanity's considerable efforts to stop it child labour remains a global problem. In the int...
Is not a new phenomenon that there are some children who work in hard and inhuman conditions. It is ...
The notion of child labour is well determined by relevant international instruments and it can be sa...
more than 306 million children worldwide currently involved in work.1 Of those children, 215 million...
Our dissertation attempts to demonstrate that the combination of international labour standards and ...
Child labour has always been one of the core concerns of the International Labour Organisation (ILO)...
The Minimum Age Convention no. 138 of 1973 in Article 7 provides that children between the ages of 1...
Child labour is recognised as the most important source of child exploitation and abuse in the devel...
In 2012, Bahrain made a minimal advancement in efforts to eliminate the worst forms of child labor. ...
Child labour has always been one of the core concerns of the International Labour Organisation (ILO)...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to call for re-thinking of the universal minimum-age approach...
The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age C...
The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age C...
The International Labour Organisation (the ILO) has regulated child labour through the Minimum Age C...
Despite humanity's considerable efforts to stop it child labour remains a global problem. In the int...
Despite humanity's considerable efforts to stop it child labour remains a global problem. In the int...
Is not a new phenomenon that there are some children who work in hard and inhuman conditions. It is ...
The notion of child labour is well determined by relevant international instruments and it can be sa...
more than 306 million children worldwide currently involved in work.1 Of those children, 215 million...
Our dissertation attempts to demonstrate that the combination of international labour standards and ...
Child labour has always been one of the core concerns of the International Labour Organisation (ILO)...
The Minimum Age Convention no. 138 of 1973 in Article 7 provides that children between the ages of 1...
Child labour is recognised as the most important source of child exploitation and abuse in the devel...
In 2012, Bahrain made a minimal advancement in efforts to eliminate the worst forms of child labor. ...
Child labour has always been one of the core concerns of the International Labour Organisation (ILO)...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to call for re-thinking of the universal minimum-age approach...