Children of a Bitter Harvest: Child Labour in the Cape Winelands is made up of over 100 interconnected short stories that document moments in the lives of children who worked in the heart of South Africa's wine industry between 1998 and 2010, and are framed further by the farm uprisings of 2012. The stories are framed by the more recent 'farm strikes' in the Western Cape. The children in the book not all of whom managed to survive AIDS are now young adults in a new South Africa that ostensibly offers them certain freedoms to overcome the shackles of race and class domination. However, without the kind of radical economic restructuring that would make this possible, all of the children remain extremely poor adults. As documented by the autho...
Bibliography: leaves 112-115.I argue that alcohol is embedded in forces of structural violence that ...
The 1999 survey of activities of young people in South Africa, conducted by Statistics South Africa,...
Child labor in the U.S. is all but invisible, and very few people are rushing to correct that miscon...
Children of a Bitter Harvest: Child Labour in the Cape Winelands is made up of over 100 interconnect...
The UJ Library cordially invite you to meet Susan Levine the author of Children of a bitter harvest ...
The UJ Library cordially invites you to meet Susan Levine the author of CHILDREN OF A BITTER HARVEST...
Abstract n This article explores recent transformations in child labour legislation in the wake of r...
The product of 350 years of endeavour, viticulture is pivotal in the geographies of the south-wester...
The South African wine industry faces unique challenges in the socio-economic development of its far...
In this article we draw on the life histories of farm workers living in the Eastern Cape Province, S...
How has the end of apartheid affected the experiences of South African children and adolescents? Thi...
Approximately 400,000 children across the United States are working in fields and orchards tending a...
In order to proactively bring about change, it is critical in a post-apartheid context for South Afr...
It is increasingly clear that children and the youth today play a significant role in the labour pro...
The Children in the Fields Campaign is working to help farmworker children share their stories and b...
Bibliography: leaves 112-115.I argue that alcohol is embedded in forces of structural violence that ...
The 1999 survey of activities of young people in South Africa, conducted by Statistics South Africa,...
Child labor in the U.S. is all but invisible, and very few people are rushing to correct that miscon...
Children of a Bitter Harvest: Child Labour in the Cape Winelands is made up of over 100 interconnect...
The UJ Library cordially invite you to meet Susan Levine the author of Children of a bitter harvest ...
The UJ Library cordially invites you to meet Susan Levine the author of CHILDREN OF A BITTER HARVEST...
Abstract n This article explores recent transformations in child labour legislation in the wake of r...
The product of 350 years of endeavour, viticulture is pivotal in the geographies of the south-wester...
The South African wine industry faces unique challenges in the socio-economic development of its far...
In this article we draw on the life histories of farm workers living in the Eastern Cape Province, S...
How has the end of apartheid affected the experiences of South African children and adolescents? Thi...
Approximately 400,000 children across the United States are working in fields and orchards tending a...
In order to proactively bring about change, it is critical in a post-apartheid context for South Afr...
It is increasingly clear that children and the youth today play a significant role in the labour pro...
The Children in the Fields Campaign is working to help farmworker children share their stories and b...
Bibliography: leaves 112-115.I argue that alcohol is embedded in forces of structural violence that ...
The 1999 survey of activities of young people in South Africa, conducted by Statistics South Africa,...
Child labor in the U.S. is all but invisible, and very few people are rushing to correct that miscon...