| Literature DB >> 35409766 |
Alhassan Abdullah1,2, Inès Huynh1, Clifton R Emery1, Lucy P Jordan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research has established the family as the predominant context for child labor practices. Decisions to involve children in child labor within the family or by a family member (herein family child labor) is strongly motivated by cultural beliefs that normalize child labor. This systematic review sought to synthesize evidence on the social norms that support child labor practices, and the normative interpretation of international child labor legislation/standards.Entities:
Keywords: child labor; child rights; child work; culture; family child labor; social norms
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35409766 PMCID: PMC8998633 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19074082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Boolean search strategy and word combinations.
| Keywords and Word Combinations |
|---|
| Child labor * AND culture OR social norm |
| Child work * AND culture OR norm |
| Child labor AND social standard OR culture |
| Hazardous work OR Labor AND culture |
Note: (*) is used to identify different ways the word maybe written.
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Summary of studies included in the review.
| Reference | Study Method | Sample | Location | Child Labor Activity Explored | Study Purpose | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adonteng-Kissi [ | In-depth interviews, focus group interviews and observation | 60 parents | Ghana | Farming and Fishing | To explore parents’ perception on the nature of child labor | (A) Children engage in child labor in order to take over from their parents’ and the family’s business |
| Adonteng-Kissi [ | In-depth interviews, focus group interviews and observation | 60 participants including parents and social service workers | Ghana | Farming and Fishing | Explore the cultural challenges that inhibit the implementation of UNCRC’s provision of children’s right to provision, protection and participation in child labor | (A) Children are socialized to believe in child labor. |
| Adonteng-Kissi [ | In-depth interviews, and focus group interviews | 60 parents, government workers, and workers of NGOs | Ghana | Fishing and Farming | Explore the causes of child labor in Ghana | (A) Children enhance competency and obtain farm ethics through working on family farms |
| Akilova [ | In-depth narrative interviews | 29 participants (12 parents and 17 children) | Tajikistan | General child labor and child work | Explore the pathways to child work and child labor in Tajikistan | (A) Child work is normalized in post-soviet Tajikistan |
| Bahar [ | In-depth interviews, demographic survey and observation | 27 low-income mothers | Turkey | General child labor | Explore mother’s beliefs and attitudes about child labor in Turkey | (A) Quest to teach children about work and life influenced parents to involve their children in work. |
| Baker & Hilton [ | Ethnography | 162 children and youth | Nepal | Carpet industry | To explore western interpretation of children’s rights and its influence on child labor practices in Nepal | The success of child right promotion programs depends on socio-cultural interpretations. |
| Adonteng-Kissi [ | In-depth interviews, focus group interviews and survey | 400 survey and 60 parents. | Ghana | Fishing and Farming | To ascertain the impact of child labor policies on child labor in Ghana | (A) Legislations on child labor have had some impact on the rate of child labor, but not severe. |
| Berlan [ | Ethnography and child-friendly participatory method | 84 children | Ghana | Cocoa | Explore the impact of micro-level factors on child labor in Ghana | Beliefs over the formative value of work-informed influenced child labor in cocoa. |
| Bray [ | Mixed method: | 5000 surveys in Cape Town and ethnographic engagement in Cape Peninsular | South Africa | Child domestic work | Explore children’s involvement in household work as a form of child labor. | (A) Child domestic activities is gendered with girls undertaking more maintenance roles. |
| Adonteng-Kissi [ | In-depth individual and focus group interviews | 60 parents and social service workers | Ghana | Fishing and Farming | Explore whether child labor violate human right. | (A) Parents consider child labor as part of the best interest of children |
| Busquet et al. [ | In-depth individual and focus group interviews | 38 key informant interviews and 12 focus groups interviews | Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire | Cocoa | Explore the value chain processes in child labor within cocoa areas | (A) Child labor is enforced by the normative belief that children should follow the path of their parents, and children are required to undertake informal apprenticeship training to succeed in life. |
| Delap [ | In-depth interviews | 45 participants | Bangladesh | General child labor | Explore economic and cultural factors that underpin child labor | The type of work children will do at home or in the carpet industry is determined by gender roles. |
| Krauss [ | Mixed method: Survey and Interviews | 8687 household survey in the GLSS data, and 15 qualitative interviews with children and the Minister of Education | Ghana | General child labor | Explore monetary and non-monetary factors that influence child labor in sub-Saharan Africa | Structure of the economy and social norm of inheriting farming occupation are the main driving forces of child labor in Africa. |
Note: GLSS = Ghana Living Standards Survey.