This article outlines a tension that plays itself out in rural areas throughout Africa. On the one hand, it is recognized that children throughout the world engage in economic activity, and this is particularly so in rural areas. On the other hand, is the policy, corporate and NGO focus on the elimination of child labour from the production of a small number of African export commodities. We argue that a key to resolving this tension and opening the door to more effective interventions to address children’s harmful work is to reframe the problem of, and debates around, child labour by changing the focus to children’s work. The article briefly explores some implications of this shift
Abstract n This article explores recent transformations in child labour legislation in the wake of r...
According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), sub-Saharan Africa has the highest rate of...
Child labour is pervasive across sub-Saharan Africa. The common assumption is that monetary poverty ...
This paper steps back from dominant discourses around child labour, and examines how a reframing of ...
Millions of children throughout Africa undertake many forms of farm and domestic work. Some of this ...
A central and implicit issue that shapes the present political and institutional consensus surroundi...
This paper proposes a dynamic conceptual framework – the edu-workscape – for understanding how rural...
This paper presents an overview of child labour in Africa. It discusses the incidence and nature of ...
Child labour in agriculture remains a global concern. Agriculture is the sector where most child lab...
Cocoa farming in West Africa has a long history of relying on family labour, including children’s la...
An emerging orthodoxy supports the proposition that the rural economy – built around agriculture but...
Research articleUrban agriculture in Dar es Salaam was found to use child labour of both children wi...
This article questions the applicability of international standards on children’s work to such situ...
This exploratory rapid review finds that child labour in agriculture is a global issue, with the agr...
How do young people across Africa engage with the rural economy? And what are the implications for h...
Abstract n This article explores recent transformations in child labour legislation in the wake of r...
According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), sub-Saharan Africa has the highest rate of...
Child labour is pervasive across sub-Saharan Africa. The common assumption is that monetary poverty ...
This paper steps back from dominant discourses around child labour, and examines how a reframing of ...
Millions of children throughout Africa undertake many forms of farm and domestic work. Some of this ...
A central and implicit issue that shapes the present political and institutional consensus surroundi...
This paper proposes a dynamic conceptual framework – the edu-workscape – for understanding how rural...
This paper presents an overview of child labour in Africa. It discusses the incidence and nature of ...
Child labour in agriculture remains a global concern. Agriculture is the sector where most child lab...
Cocoa farming in West Africa has a long history of relying on family labour, including children’s la...
An emerging orthodoxy supports the proposition that the rural economy – built around agriculture but...
Research articleUrban agriculture in Dar es Salaam was found to use child labour of both children wi...
This article questions the applicability of international standards on children’s work to such situ...
This exploratory rapid review finds that child labour in agriculture is a global issue, with the agr...
How do young people across Africa engage with the rural economy? And what are the implications for h...
Abstract n This article explores recent transformations in child labour legislation in the wake of r...
According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), sub-Saharan Africa has the highest rate of...
Child labour is pervasive across sub-Saharan Africa. The common assumption is that monetary poverty ...