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Related topics (child labour, abuse, slavery, child soldier etc.) - Forced labour and slavery
 
International Labour Office (2009). El costo de la coacción. 108 p. In Spanish. 
http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_norm/---relconf/documents/meetingdocument/wcms_106232.pdf
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International Labour Office (ILO). (2008). Combating Forced Labour. A Handbook for Employers & Business 1. Introduction and Overview.155 p. “This Handbook for Employers and Business provides excellent practical tools and guidance to enable business and its organisations to identify and prevent situations of forced labour.”
http://www.childtrafficking.com
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International Labour Organization (ILO). (2007).Directions for national and international data collection on forced labour. 47 p.  This paper provides some ideas and directions as to how the existing gaps in our understanding of the quantitative dimensions of forced labour could be reduced. The paper discusses three areas in which future work is most urgently needed. The first is the improvement of country-level data collection on identified cases of forced labour and human trafficking. Such administrative databases would allow for a better follow-up of all reported cases, including for law enforcement and assistance programmes to the victims. The second is the need to develop better national estimates of forced labour through surveys or other statistical methods. Finally the paper also proposes that the ILO should continue to maintain its global database and develop a number of indicators by which to measure global progress towards the ultimate objective of eradicating modern forced labour.
http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_norm/---declaration/documents/publication/wcms_081986.pdf
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International Labour Organisation/International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (ILO/IPEC). (2001). Bonded Labour Among Child Workers of the Kamaiya System: A Rapid Assessment. 56 p. "This rapid assessment investigation set out to fill the gaps in knowledge of the incidence and nature of child bonded labour in Nepal. It has attempted to view this worst form of child labour in the wider context of child labour and debt-bondage among one of the largest ethnic groups of Nepal - the Kamaiya households in the far and mid western districts of the country."
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/ipec/simpoc/nepal/ra/bonded.pdf
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International Labor Rights Forum and Human Rights Defenders of Uzbekistan. (ILRF). (2008). Forced Child Labour in Uzbekistan’s 2008 Spring Agricultural Season. 17 p. “As the annual cotton harvest winds down, Uzbekistan’s labour practices are once again facing scrutiny. A recently released report purports to offer proof that Tashkent, despite ratifying two international agreements designed to discourage the use of child labour, is continuing to send school-age children into the fields.”
http://www.crin.org/docs/UzbekistanSpring2008.pdf
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