Born Unfree: Child Labour, Education, and the State in India, An Omnibus Comprising

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It has been twenty years since the Indian Parliament passed the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, 1986. Yet more children work as labourers in India than in any other country in the world. The Omnibus brings together three significant works on child labour focusing on the key factors which create an exploitative relationship between the economy and the children of the poor and  the marginalized. In an introduction written especially for this Omnibus, Neera Burra points out that there are definitional issues around the very concept of child labour, and suggests that insights from feminist economics can help illuminate them; only then can we form an accurate picture of the role of child labour in the economy. In addition, she examines the strategy of different groups who have successfully worked against child labour. She argues that child labour can only be reduced when civil society and the state work together to get children out of work and into school. In The Child and the State, Myron Weiner argues that it is not India’s poverty which prevents the introduction of universal primary education and the banning of child labour, rather it is the lack of political will and the ‘belief systems’ prevalent in Indian society. Born to Work  is based on first-hand field investigations into the employment of child labour in five industries: brassware, gem polishing, lock-making, pottery, and glass manufacture. Neera Burra documents the hazards that these children face and argues that working from a young age leads to a shortened working life. Thus, child labour is not only a Consequence of poverty, but also a major cause of it. In Child Rights in India, Asha Bajpai provides a detailed overview of the rights of the child in domestic and international law, with a detailed analysis of case law. The chapter excerpted here is devoted to the ‘Right Against Economic Exploitation’ and includes an examination of various government schemes and NGO interventions, as well as testimonies from children who work as domestic labourers. This volume will interest scholars and students of child rights and human rights, development studies, activists, NGOs, journalists, and policymakers.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Asha Bajpai

Asha Bajpai is Reader at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Neera Burra

Neera Burra is Assistant Resident Representative and Senior Social Development Adviser at the Sustainable Energy and Environment Division (SEED) of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), India Office, New Delhi. A sociologist by training, she obtained her Ph.D. from the Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi. She has previously been with the International Labour Organization (ILO) as National Expert in Its women's programme (1988-93) and with the United Nations Volunteers (UNV) as Programme Manager for South Asia (1993-95). Dr. Burra has been closely involved with NGOs and CBOs working on micro-credit and women's empowerment for the last 15 years. She has also worked extensively on the issues of child labour and education and was recently awarded a post-doctoral fellowship by the Globalization and Human Rights Programmes of the University of Chicago to study the impact of globalization on child labour. Dr. Burra's current interests are in natural resource management for poverty eradication with a strong thrust on micro-credit, women's empowerment and poverty eradication. She has published extensively in the field of child labour, and has also written on watershed development, women's empowerment and micro-credit.

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Bibliographic information

Title
Born Unfree: Child Labour, Education, and the State in India, An Omnibus Comprising
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
0195679903
Length
lxxxviii+560p.
Subjects