Child Labour

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Child labour
By rekha yadav

history
ndustrial revolution
 during the industrial revolution, children as young as four
were employed in production factories with dangerous,
and often fatal, working conditions.[18] based on
thischild labourers, macon, georgia, 1909
 i understanding of the use of children as labourers, it is
now considered by wealthy countries to be a
human rights violation, and is outlawed, while some
poorer countries may allow or tolerate child labour. child
labour can also be defined as the full-time employment
of children who are under a minimum legal age.
 Victorian era


Factories and mines were not the only place where child labour was prevalent in early 20th century. Home-based manufacturing across the
United States and Europe employed children as well.[10] Governments and reformers argued that labour in factories must be regulated and the
state had an obligation to provide welfare for poor. Legislation that followed had the effect of moving work out of factories into urban homes.
Families and women in particular preferred it because it allowed them to generate income while taking care of household duties.
Home-based manufacturing operations were active year round. Families willingly deployed their children in these income generating home
enterprises.[31] In many cases, men worked from home. In France, over 58 percent of garment workers operated out of their homes; in Germany,
the number of full-time home operations nearly doubled between 1882 to 1907; and in the United States, millions of families operated out of
home seven days a week, year round to produce garments, shoes, artificial flowers, feathers, match boxes, toys, umbrellas and other products.
Children aged 5–14 worked alongside the parents. Home-based operations and child labour in Australia, Britain, Austria and other parts of the
world was common. Rural areas similarly saw families deploying their children in agriculture. In 1946, Frieda Miller - then Director of United
States Department of Labour - told the International Labour Organisation that these home-based operations offered, "low wages, long hours,
child labour, unhealthy

hild labour was employed to varying extents
through most of history. Before 1940, numerous
children aged 5–14 worked in Europe, the United
States and various colonies of European powers.
These children worked in agriculture

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