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Related topics (child labour, abuse, slavery, child soldier etc.) - Child labour - Other countries and regions |
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Casa Alianca (2000). Exploitation of Children - A Worldwide Outrage. (Worldwide Statistics). 3 p. "The phenomenon of street children is global, alarming and escalating. No country and virtually no city anywhere in the world today is without the presence of street children. It is a problem of both developed and developing countries, but is more prevalent in the poor nations of Latin America, Asia and Africa. Poverty, family disintegration due to health or death, neglect, abuse or abandonment, and social unrest are all common triggers for a child's life on the streets." http://www.hiltonfoundation.org/press/16-pdf3.pdf |
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20.54 kb) 
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Children's Human Rights Centre of Albania (CRCA). (2000). The Vicious Circle. 28 p. A report on child labour in Albania. There is widespread of child labour forms in Albania, especially of begging, street vendors and farming; children who work, are abandoned either from one or both parents. http://www.crca.org.al/National Reports/The Vicious Circle.zip |
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467.16 kb) 
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Department of Labor, Bureau of International Affairs. (1995). By the Sweat and Toil of Children: The Use of Child Labor in U.S. Agricultural Imports & Forced and Bonded Child Labor 217 p. "In 1995, the U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL) released the second in a series of reports, By the Sweat and Toil of Children: The Use of Child Labor in American Imports. The report cites the Ivory Coast for children working on medium-sized coffee plantations, while saying more research is needed to determine the conditions of work, ages of children, and primary school enrollment. No mention is made of child labor in cocoa." http://www.freetheslaves.net/cgi-bin/axs/ax.pl?/resources/pdfs/07sweat_and_toil_vol2.pdf |
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703.97 kb) 
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Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). (2009). The Invisible Face of Child Labour in Latin America and the Caribbean. 12 p. Child labour has a gender bihttp://www.crin.org/docs/challenges-8-Web.pdf |
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1530.06 kb) 
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Fafo Institute for Applied Social Science. (2002). Magnitude and Characteristics of Working Children in Syria. A Report to UNICEF, Syria, based on a National Household Survey, 68 p. “This report has been written following an initiative by UNICEF, Syria, to document children’s relationship to employment. As it will show, there are today a great number of employed children in Syria. They tend to work long hours for little pay, and the vast majority of them are not enrolled in school. It is our hope that by portraying the child workers in some detail, this report will support UNICEF and the Syrian government’s efforts to improve the lives, development prospects and life-chances of many young ones.” http://www.fafo.no/ais/middeast/syria/childlabour/wcsfinalreport.pdf |
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596.87 kb) 
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