Printable version from NI Global Issues for Learners of English:
Child Labour
Let us work!
A report on what working children said at the Amsterdam Conference on Child Labour.
The International Labour Organization (ILO) plans to produce a new Convention on Hazardous Child Labour in the year 2000. To help prepare this agreement, a Conference on Child Labour was held in Amsterdam in February 1997.
The aims of the conference were:
- to decide which kinds of child labour are the worst;
- to understand why children work in these jobs;
- to look for ways to stop children from doing these jobs.
People from thirty countries attended the conference. They were:
- government ministers;
- company bosses;
- trade union leaders;
- representatives from international organizations;
and
- eight teenagers who represented organizations of working children in Central and South America, West Africa, and Asia.
These child worker delegates were elected by working children in their own countries. They had their own ideas and opinions about the problems of working children. They did not always agree with the adult delegates, or say what the adults wanted to hear.
THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION: an agency of the United Nations that is concerned with workers' pay and working conditions.
HAZARDOUS (adj): dangerous.
DELEGATE (n): someone who has been chosen to express the opinions of a group of people.
Child workers are helping themselves
All the child worker delegates spoke in support of the ten proposals for better lives for working children. These proposals had been agreed at the first international conference of working children in India in 1996.
All the child workers represented organizations of working children. These organizations are leading the fight to make the lives of working children better. They are already causing changes. For example:
- Lakshmi's movement is now represented in five village authorities in her part of India;
- The National Movement of Organized Working Children in Peru has written its own curriculum for working children and this curriculum is being used in a government school;
- The National Movement of Street Boys and Girls in Brazil is taking part in establishing the legal rights of working children in Brazil.
AUTHORITIES: the people in charge of a place or an area.
CURRICULUM (n): what you study in a school.
The original version of this article entitled "Let Us Work" appeared in the July 1997 issue of the New Internationalist.
Copyright 1997, 1998: the New Internationalist
Last Modified: 3 May 1999