Overview of ILO-IPEC Action against Child Labour

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Presentation transcript:

Overview of ILO-IPEC Action against Child Labour Constance Thomas, lecturer Former Director of IPEC/FPRW 2018 www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 1

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour What is Child Labour? It refers to work that: Is mentally, physically, socially or morally dangerous and harmful to children; and Interferes with their schooling: By depriving them of the opportunity to attend school; By obliging them to leave school prematurely: or By requiring them to attempt to combine school attendance with excessively long and heavy work 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

The Basic Breakdown 2016 estimates: 218m in economic activity, of whom: 152m in child labour (88m boys/64m girls) 73m in worst forms (hazardous) 62% boys 5-11 yrs: 73m CL; 19m WFCL 12 -14 yrs: 42m CL; 16m WFCL 15-17 yrs: 37m CL; 37m WFCL Trends: CL reduced 38%, WF reduced 58% since 2000

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour The Basic Breakdown 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

The Face of Child Labour 69.1% is unpaid family work, 27.2% is paid employment, 3.7 is self-employment 71% in agriculture; 17% in services; 12% in manufacturing Estimated at least 7% in global supply chains (old info)

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour Regional breakdown Latin America and Caribbean Same at 10.7 million (5.3%) Asia and the Pacific Down to 62.1 million (7.4%) Sub-Saharan Africa Up to 72.1 million (19.6 %) www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 8

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour Causes of Child Labour Poverty Parental attitudes and knowledge Barriers to education Market demand Perceived suitability of children to certain types of work Lack of legislation and/or poor enforcement of existing legislation Regional/internal conflict Situations of fragility and crises (i.e.disasters) 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

Consequences of Child Labour Deprives them of schooling or requires them to assume the multiple burden of schooling and work Jeopardises their health and safety – high risk of illness and injury…even death (especially children in armed conflict) Affects their physical development (malnutrition, long working hours in bad conditions) Exposes them to physical and psychological abuse and violence which all have long term consequences Deprives them of their childhood and of their future 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

ILO Framework to combat child labour Minimum Age Convention, 1973 (No. 138) & Recommendation No. 146 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention, 1999 (No. 182) & Recommendation No. 190. Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work (1998) Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization (2008) Decent Work Agenda Strategic Policy Framework and Programme and Budget Global Action Plans against Child Labour (2006, 2010, FPRW 2012) www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 11

The International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) Launched in 1992 Main objective: the progressive elimination of child labour To be achieved through strengthening the capacity of countries to deal with the problem and promoting a worldwide movement to combat child labour IPEC is a rights based development programme which employs internationally recognized labour standards, technical advice, and technical cooperation projects towards achievement of its objective Tripartite cooperation with governments, workers’ and employers’ organizations is the cornerstone of national action against child labour and IPEC interventions. Promotes worldwide movement with civil society actors 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

Roadmap to eliminate WFCL by 2016 Adopted at The Hague Global Child Labour Conference 2010 and Brasilia Conference 2013 Preamble: CL is impediment to achieving MDGs; Guiding principles: Governments have prime responsibility, adequate financial resources to available. Priority actions by governments: Legislation & law enforcement; free, com- pulsory quality education; social protection; labour market policies Priority actions by social partners and others Promotion and monitoring framework

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour Global Action Plan (2010) Supporting national responses, mainstreaming CL concerns within national development and policy frameworks Strengthening the importance of law, public services and social dialogue Promoting the role of responsible business Strengthening child labour monitoring systems (community-based, labour inspection and national statistical services – identification, withdrawal and prevention, referral, tracking) Deepening and strengthening the worldwide movement Emphasis on Africa Reflected in a “new generation” of IPEC projects Child-labour free areas: integrated area-based approach www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 14 14

Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work (2012) New Resolution and Plan of Action emphasizing the inter-linkage between the four sets of fundamental rights: freedom of association and collective bargaining; abolition of forced labour; elimination of child labour; right to non discrimination

IPEC’s strategy: “top down” & “bottom up” Working with goverments, trade unions and employers to improve legislation, policies, support national plans of action on child labour and strengthen the capacities of key players at the policy, planning and intervention levels Creating awareness at all levels and mobilising alliances and partnerships Mainstreaming child labour issues into national and global development frameworks Demonstrating viable strategies for the prevention of child labour, withdrawal of children from work, the rehabilitation of former child labourers and ensuring their access to education www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 16

IPEC Priorities: sectors, regions typologies Agriculture, mining, child domestic labour, informal economy Focus on Africa Worst forms: Bonded and forced labour The special situation of girls and older boys Youth employment (Hazardous work) www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 17

Research and knowledge Global Reports 2010, 2013, including global estimates and trends; UCW interagency report with UNICEF & World Bank; National child labour surveys; New thematic tools and analytical studies; Breakthrough in research methods ie WFCL other than hazardous CL; Improved linkages with education, youth employment, social protection; law enforcement www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 18 18

IPEC: Action through Policy Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers United Nations Development Agreement Framework ILO’s Decent Work Country Programme Nation Sectoral Policies i.e. Education, Industry National Action Plans/Roadmaps 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour IPEC on the ground Projects supporting direct interventions for at-risk children, child labourers, their families and communities, including: Community mobilisation and awareness raising Withdrawal and rehabilitation services Provision of education (formal and non- formal) and vocational training Economic empowerment of targeted families Local child labour monitoring, involving the local community in identifying child labourers and linking them to appropriate services 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

Child labour and Education Working with Ministries of Labour and Education on policies and programmes responding to child labour Advocacy to encourage removal of barriers to education. Non formal education initiatives to reach out of school children, and tools for developing children’s awareness concerning child labour Integrating information on child labour within school curriculum and teacher training Work with teacher’s trade unions, whose members can support advocacy and action against child labour Vocational and skills training programmes which provide practical skills for children reaching the minimum age of employment

Partnerships and networking Understanding Children’s Work (partnership of ILO, UNICEF, World Bank); Global Task Force on Child Labour and Education for All (GTF); International Partnership for Cooperation on Child Labour in Agriculture; UN Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking International Working Group on Children on the Move; Paris Principles Steering Group on children associated with armed forces and armed groups; www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 23 23

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour International partnership for cooperation on child labour in agriculture Bridge the gap between technical areas “agriculture” and “labour International agricultural organizations are important conduits because of their close contacts with national: ministries or departments of agriculture agricultural extension services farmers' organizations and cooperatives agricultural: producer organizations, research bodies, marketing boards 4/7/2019www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour

Engaging with Business ILO Mulinational Enterprise Declaration OECD Guidelines UN Global Compact UN Human Rights Framework (Ruggie principles) Codes & Standards Guidelines

Business risks Child labour in supply chains But significant risks persist Child labour in supply chains Informal economy, agriculture Household production Business & labour practices that perpetuate poverty

Why should business care Because it is a visible violation Because laws requires it Because the State is unable/unwilling to protect rights Because it helps manage reputation Because it is part of social responsibility Because it can create value and opportunity for the business Because it can enhance productivity

International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour THANK YOU www.ilo.org International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour 31