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Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Protect the Young Kids wonderful Protect the Young Kids wonderful
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SESSION 1
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Provide an overview of international
frameworks on child labour and education
Provide a picture of the global extent of
child labour
Session aims
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Tackling child labour and the international effort
to promote Education for All are closely related
objectives
67 million primary aged children and 71 million
lower secondary aged children are not in school
153 million child labourers aged 5-14
The international community has a target of
achieving basic education for all children by
2015. If to be achieved, child labour must be
addressed
Child labour and Education for All
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Article 26 Everyone has the right to
education. Education shall be free, at least
in the elementary and fundamental stages.
Elementary education shall be compulsory.
Technical and professional education shall
be made generally available.
UN Declaration on Human Rights, 1948
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Article 28 recognizes the right of the child to
education and requires: primary education
compulsory and available free to all;
development of different forms of secondary
education, including general and vocational
education, available and accessible to every
child; measures to encourage regular
attendance at schools and the reduction of
dropout rates.
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child,
1989
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Article 32 recognizes the right of the child
to be protected from economic exploitation
and from performing any work that is likely
to be hazardous or to interfere with the
child’s education, or to be harmful to the
child's health or physical, mental, spiritual,
moral or social development.
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child,
1989
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
ILO Minimum Age Convention, No. 138
(1973) “The Minimum Age…shall be not
less than the age of completion of
compulsory schooling ….”
ILO Conventions on child labour (1/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
ILO Worst Forms of Child Labour
Convention, No. 182 (1999): “Each
Member shall, …ensure access to free
basic education, and, wherever possible
and appropriate, vocational training, for all
children removed from the worst forms of
child labour…”
ILO Conventions on child labour (2/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
General
For developing
countries
General minimum age 15 years or more 14 years
Light work 13 years 12 years
Hazardous work
18 years
(16 under certain
conditions)
18 years
(16 under certain
conditions)
Child labour: Minimum age criteria
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
MDG 2 aims to ensure all children complete
primary education
MDG 3 aims for equality of education access
between boys and girls
90 of the 152 developing countries are
considered off track –will not reach the goal on
current trends.
MDG progress report “High rates of poverty in
rural areas limit educational opportunities
because of demands for children’s labour….”
Millennium Development Goals (MDG)
(2000-2015)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
The World Education Forum in Dakar in 2000:
international commitment to make basic
education a high development priority
Set targets for achievement of basic education
standards, including universal primary education
(UPE), by 2015
The 2007 EFA Global Monitoring Report stated
that EFA requires an inclusive approach and
called for policies aimed at “reaching the
unreached”, including policies to overcome the
need for child labour
Education for All (EFA)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Primary school aged children not enrolled dropped
from 105 million to 72 million between 1999 and
2007
Progress also on secondary education: enrolment up
from 60% (1999) to 66% (2007)
Rapid progress in some countries shows impact of
political will and donor support
A major challenge remains to enrol and retain all
children, especially the poor and disadvantaged
EFA Global Monitoring Report (1/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Goal of gender parity in primary and secondary
education by 2005 was missed. Only one third
reached the target
Poor education quality is undermining
achievement of EFA. Shortage of qualified
teachers. 1.9 million additional primary teachers
needed
Based on present trends it is likely that more
than 100 countries will not achieve UPE by 2015:
56 million children will be out of school
EFA Global Monitoring Report (2/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Child Labour, by economic activity
(5-17 age group)
Agriculture (60.0%)
Industry (7.0%)
Services (25.6%)
Not defined (7.5%)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
poverty and the need for all family members to contribute
economically
limited access to education institutions or programmes
direct or indirect costs of education
poor quality of education
discriminatory practices in society and in education
cultural and/or traditional practices in certain
geographical locations or among certain peoples, for
example, migrant workers, indigenous populations and
lower castes
Causes of child labour (1/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
employment practices where small businesses may
prefer to employ children because they can pay them
less than adults
the death of parents or guardians from AIDS, creating a
new generation of child-headed households
armed conflict and children being forced to take up arms
or give support in other forms of labour
Causes of child labour (2/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
An international partnership in support of Education for
All, launched at the EFA High-Level meeting in Beijing in
2005
Members: ILO, UNESCO, UNICEF, UNDP, the World
Bank, Education International (EI) and the Global March
Against Child Labour. Governments of Brazil and Norway
have also been actively involved
Objective is to mobilize political will and momentum to
mainstream child labour in national and international
policy frameworks contributing to EFA objectives,
through:
• strengthening the knowledge base
• advocacy
• developing partnerships
Global Task Force on Child Labour and
Education for All (GTF)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
What are some of the benefits of
eliminating child labour in your country...
... for children?
... for society?
... for the economy?
Question for group work
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 2a
The national
child labour context
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
To have a clear picture of the national child
labour situation
Consider the role of the legislative
framework
Session aims
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Total
children
(‘000)
Children in
employment
Child
labourers
Children in
hazardous work
(‘000) % (‘000) % (‘000) %
World 1 586 288305 669 19.3215 269 13.6115 314 7.3
Asia and the Pacific853 895174 460 20.4113 607 13.3 48 164 5.6
Latin America and
the Caribbean
141 043 18 851 13.4 14 125 10.0 9 436 6.7
Sub-Saharan Africa 257 108 84 229 32.8 65 064 25.3 38 736 15.1
Other regions 334 242 28 129 8.4 22 473 6.7 18 978 5.7
Estimates of child labour 5-17 (2008)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
National Government have an obligation to facilitate the
rights of children to education and freedom from child
labour
Review and/or reform of national legislation may be
required
Issues for consideration:
•Legislation should be in accordance with Conventions
Nos. 138 and 182
•Harmonization of legal ages for schooling and
employment
•Expanding coverage of the law
•Types of work that are likely to harm children
The legislative framework
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Sound knowledge base of the extent and
causes of child labour are required for
putting child labour on the national policy
agenda
Data necessary to support programming
Cost/benefit analyses can be useful,
particularly for advocacy
Evidence of child labour
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
(Information can be added here on the
national child labour context. For example
if there has been a national child labour
survey or rapid assessment, you may want
to provide key facts)
National data on child labour (1/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
(Information can be added here on the
national child labour context. For example
if there has been a national child labour
survey or rapid assessment. If necessary
add more slides)
National data on child labour (2/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
1.What are the main sources of national
information on child labour of which you are
aware?
2.If recent child labour surveys have been
conducted, have their conclusions been
summarised?
Question for discussion (1/2)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
3.Are there databases that already contain child
labour data that have not yet been analysed and
used to help build a picture of child labour?
4.Can the information on the geographical
concentration of child labour, or occupational
focus, be used to support education
programming?
Question for Discussion
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 2b
The national
education context
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Get a clear picture of the national
education situation
Consider strengths and weaknesses within
the education system, including
disadvantaged geographical areas
Session aims
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
(TO BE COMPLETED BY FACILITATOR
ACCORDING TO NATIONAL CONTEXT)
Minimum age for enrolment in primary
education
Length of the mandatory school cycle
Transitions from primary to lower
secondary to upper secondary education
Education legislation
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
National data on primary school
enrolment and completion (1/2)
(TO BE COMPLETED BY FACILITATOR
ACCORDING TO NATIONAL CONTEXT )
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
National data on lower school
enrolment and completion (2/2)
(TO BE COMPLETED BY FACILITATOR
ACCORDING TO NATIONAL CONTEXT )
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 3
Exclusion:
Barriers facing
child labourers
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Consider the groups of children that are
prone to child labour and exclusion from
education
Consider how child labour increases
marginalization from education
Identify some of the challenges for
education systems
Session aims
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Children living in rural areas
Children living in urban slums
Minority populations
Girls
Children affected or infected by HIV and AIDS,
particularly AIDS orphans
Children of migrant families
Street children
Children who are trafficked for purposes of labour, or
commercial sexual exploitation, and child domestic
workers
Children affected by crisis or conflict
Children at risk of exclusion
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Distance to school
Social/language barriers
Discrimination (gender, ethnicity, disability etc.)
Early marriage
Lack of birth registration
Inflexible scheduling
Fear of violence at, or on the way to, school
Barriers to education: Accessibility
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Direct costs (e.g. school fees, other
compulsory fees)
Indirect costs (e.g. uniforms, textbooks,
transportation, meals)
Opportunity cost (i.e. income/wage lost to
family from child leaving work to go to
school)
Barriers to education: Affordability
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Lack of infrastructure, facilities, materials
and support systems for children
Inadequate conditions of work for teachers
Lack of adequate training, aids and
materials for teachers
Barriers to education: Quality
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Curriculum detached from local language,
needs, values and aspirations of children
at risk of dropping out
Curriculum inadequate to prepare older
children for the world of work
Barriers to education: Relevance
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Limited time available for school
Too tired, hungry or sick to concentrate >
increased risk of dropping out
Discrimination and ridicule by peers and/or
teachers
Specific barriers for child labourers
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Majority of children not enrolled in school are girls
(54%)
Distance to school may pose risk
Participation in education may depend on separate
facilities or female teachers
Educating girls is one of the best investments a
country can make > economic development; high
social returns (e.g. lower birth rates, health)
Girls’ work is often hidden (household chores,
domestic servitude)
Girls’ education
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
In many countries, AIDS has added a new
dimension to the problem of child labour
UNAIDS estimates 12 million children have lost
one or both parents as a result of AIDS in Sub-
Saharan Africa
Many drop out of school and look for work to
survive
Children often have to provide care and assume
other household responsibilities when a parent
becomes ill or dies
HIV and AIDS
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
35% of out-of-school children estimated to live in
conflict-affected states
Schools destroyed during armed conflict;
children withdrawn due to insecurity
Conflict and crises may lead to an increase in
some of the unconditional worst forms of child
labour (e.g. children in armed conflict, sexual
exploitation)
In rural areas, droughts or floods may disrupt
livelihoods > children are withdrawn from school
and sent to work
Conflict and crises
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Identify the main barriers to education in
our country, and rank them in order of
importance (please be specific)
Task for group work
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 4
Tackling the barriers:
Formal education
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
To consider strategies for tackling
exclusion from education:
Abolishing school fees
Cash transfer programmes
School feeding programmes
Improving the quality of education
Making use of the education system to
monitor child labour
Session aim
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Leads to major increase in enrolment
Addresses needs of marginalised and
excluded children, including child labourers
Can promote focus on education quality
Why abolition of school fees?
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Enrolments up from 5.9 million
(2002) to 7.6 million (2005)
Primary completion rose from
63% to 76% (2002-04)
Decline in repetition and drop out rates
Case study: Kenya
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
If not planned and costed, quality will
suffer, with larger class sizes, same
facilities
Poor quality may lead to drop out
In some countries fees creeping back
through unofficial channels
2005 survey: only 16 out of 93 countries
charged no fees at all
Issues and concerns
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Launched in 2005 by UNICEF and the
World Bank
Aims to review, analyze and harness
knowledge and experience on the impact
of school fee abolition
Aims to use this knowledge and
experience as the basis for providing
guidance and countries as they embark on
abolishing school fees
School Fee Abolition Initiative
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Cash incentives to poorer families, which carry a
condition of child’s enrolment and/or regular
school attendance
Mainly used in middle income countries, with
significant impact (e.g. Latin America)
Address major causes of child labour (chronic
poverty, economic shocks)
Counter demand for child labour by raising its
opportunity cost
Very positive impact on girls’ enrolment
Cash transfer programmes
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Few address child labour explicitly
Exceptions: Brazil’s PETI; Ghana’s LEAP
May not be effective against some forms of
child labour (especially “unconditional”
worst forms)
Test will be effectiveness in Africa and
Asia (where child labour is high, but public
services and resources are more limited)
Cash transfer programmes:
Issues and concerns
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
WFP assisting 77 countries (2009)
Helpful in attracting children and providing
nutrition and health support
In poorest regions, may go as far as double
enrolment
Improve learning outcomes, and therefore the
perceived quality of education
In-school feeding can be combined with take-
home meals > important for retaining vulnerable
children
School feeding programmes
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Relevant curricula
Books and teaching resources
Education methods: need to shift to
learner-centered instruction
Instructional time: sufficient but not
excessive
Teacher absenteeism
Language of instruction
Quality of education
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Lack of trained professional teachers in
many countries, especially in rural areas
Pre-service and in-service training
Special incentives may be needed for
deployment in rural areas
Hiring contract teachers should be an
exceptional measure
Teacher quality
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Education Management Information Systems
(EMIS) used at national and provincial levels >
should be adjusted to collect information on
children not in school
Teachers can help identify children at risk of
dropping out
Peer-to-peer monitoring
Teachers can mobilize students against child
labour
IPEC resources: Child labour: An information kit
for teachers, SCREAM Education Pack
Education as a monitoring mechanism
for child labour
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
1.What costs to the family are associated with schooling in our
country (including unofficial fees)? Which could be eliminated?
2.Is there a programme of conditional cash transfers in our country? If
yes, does it respond to the needs of working children? If not, could
it be installed and how?
3.Is there any national experience with school feeding? If yes, what
are the results? If not, could a school feeding programme be
installed? With which partners, in which geographical locations?
4.What are the factors hampering education quality in our country
(e.g. school infrastructure, supply of textbooks, teacher training,
class size etc.)? How could the situation be improved?
5.How can the education system be used as monitoring mechanism
for child labour (e.g. teachers or school counsellors as monitors, or
EMIS)?
Question for group work
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 5
Tackling the barriers:
Non-formal
transitional education
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Session aim
To consider ways in which non-formal
education (NFE) can complement formal
education in overcoming exclusion and
reaching children and youth who are
unreached by the formal system
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Definition of Non-formal education
(NFE)?
NFE is difficult to define
“Learning activities organised outside the
formal education system”(UNESCO)
Clear learning objectives
Activities vary in target group, certification,
duration, and organisational structure
Should complement formal education (FE)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
International context
1990 World Conference on Education,
Jomtien: “everyone has a right to
education”
2000 Dakar Framework of Action set
seven goals including “ensuring that the
learning needs of all young people and
adults are met through equitable access to
appropriate learning and life skills
programmes”
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Dakar commentary
“..For those who drop out of school or
complete school without acquiring the
literacy, numeracy, and life skills they
need, there must be a range of options for
continuing their learning..”
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
So what is transitional NFE?
Equivalency or “second chance”
programmes
Remedial education
“Bridge schools”
Multiple providers
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Arguments for NFE
Helps to reach the unreached – children not
being served by formal system
Can help children back into formal school
Can be flexible (language, time & place, content)
May be more relevant to children’s needs
Easier to involve parents, community and civil
society
Innovation can benefit the formal system
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Case study: Mamidipudi
Venkatarangaiya Foundation, India
MVF has mobilized communities to withdraw hundreds of
thousands of children from work and place them in
school
Phase 1: Literate youth carry out surveys to identify
children at work and out of school and motivate parents
to enrol children in non-formal activities
Phase 2: Three-months summer camps in school
premises. Children start learning reading, writing and
maths in a creative learning environment. Camp
activities.
Phase 3: Transition from camp to hostel and full-time
formal education. MVF teachers and volunteers are
attached to hostels to guide the children in the transition.
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Issues and concerns
Risks making a “second class” system
Risks pulling children out of formal system
Cost efficiency, sustainability
Quality standards lacking
Few measures of outcomes, no inspection
Responsibility of the State to provide quality
education for all children
Certification and accreditation
Equivalency may restrict flexibility
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Moving forward
Strengthening formal education for all children to the
minimum age of employment
Non-formal initiatives that support formal system
Expanding post-primary NFE
Assisting return/entry for out of school children
Transitional education for those unable to return
immediately
Need to set quality standards
More focus on teaching standards and curricula
Need to monitor progression and achievement
Looking into public/private partnerships and incentives for
NGOs to provide quality NFE
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SCREAM (Supporting Children’s Rights
Through Education, Arts and the Media)
Education and social mobilization initiative to help
educators raise young people’s awareness of the causes
and consequences of child labour (formal and non-formal
education settings)
Emphasis on the use of the visual, literary and
performing arts
Provides young people with tools of self-expression and
intends to support their personal and social development
SCREAM education pack is available in 19 languages
Activities have been carried out in over 65 countries
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Questions for discussion
1.What is our country’s non-formal
education strategy and experience?
2.What is the coverage (geographical and
numbers of children reached)? Is the
coverage sufficient?
3.How can we improve the quality of non-
formal education and the linkage with
formal education?
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 6
Review of
national experience:
Strengthening formal and
non-formal initiatives
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Questions for group work
1.How can the provision of (a) formal and
(b) non-formal education be improved in
order to respond to the needs of children
engaged in or at risk of child labour?
(Rank your recommendations in order of
importance.)
2.Who could be the key actors involved?
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 7
The school-to-work
transition
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Session aims
Understand the links between youth
employment and child labour
Consider the role of pre-vocational and
vocational training, and apprenticeship
programmes in the response to child
labour
Consider the role of the Youth
Employment Network (YEN)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Decent work over the lifecycle
Quality employment;
equitable, adequate and
secure incomes;
balancing paid work,
unpaid work
and care work;
life-long learning
Childhood
Adolescence
and Youth
Adulthood
Old age
Education;
physical, mental and
emotional development
Human resource
development; transition
from school to work
Productive and
secure ageing;
social protection
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Youth employment trends
Youth are three times more likely to be
unemployed than adults
Female youth unemployment rates are higher
than male youth rates in many countries
Significant numbers of young workers are
underemployed, unproductive, working poor
or discouraged
Youth employment challenge is often linked to
child labour prevalence, the spread of
HIV/AIDs and internal/cross-border migration
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Links between child labour and
youth employment
Cruel irony in the co-existence of child labour and jobless
youth
Overlap with the worst forms of child labour (15–17 year olds)
Child labour prevents children from acquiring the human
capital necessary for gainful employment as young adults
Poor youth employment prospects may be a disincentive for
parents to invest in schooling
Workers who are less educated are more likely to be in
informal sector work and less likely to be in wage employment
Former child labourers are more likely to depend on their
children's work > perpetuating the poverty-child labour cycle
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Pre-vocational training
Arranged to acquaint children with materials and
tools for various occupations that could help them
choose a future career path (e.g. basic skills in
woodwork, cooking etc.)
Increases the relevance and interest of the
curriculum to older children, which in turn might
reduce the risk of dropping out
Can be provided through non-formal education
Typically short, providing specific skills
May include job and education counselling
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Vocational education and
skills training
Provides practical skills for older children, which are
marketable skills for decent work
Important mechanism in overcoming exclusion faced
by marginalized children and withdrawing children at
or above minimum age of employment from
hazardous labour
Access of girls may need special attention
Labour market analysis may be useful, to ensure
that training is linked to market needs
In a context where self-employment is prevalent:
provide post-training support
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Main considerations on vocational
and skills trainings
VOCATIONAL/
SKILLS
TRAINING
LABOUR MARKET
ANALYSIS
COMPETENCY
BASED TRAINING
TRAINING
ASSESSMENT /
CERTIFICATION
POST - TRAINING
SUPPORT
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Competency based trainings
(Knowledge – Skills – Attitudes)
Technical
skills
Gender
division of
labour/skills
Inclusive
Training
(disabilities)
Workers’
rights
Entrepreneurship
skills
Occupational
Safety &
Health
Core
work skills
Competency
based
trainings
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Apprenticeship programmes
Can help link up vocational training with the needs of
local labour markets
Can be formal or non-formal
Recruiting local small businesses as training providers as
an innovative way to link children up to the world of work
Learning takes place in a real commercial setting and
includes a lot of skills practice for the children involved
Children can observe and learn other entrepreneurial
skills, such as negotiating prices, meeting prospective
clients, etc.
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Apprenticeship programmes:
Issues for consideration
Minimum age laws must be respected
Apprenticeships should be based on a written contract
Avoid hazardous work > Regular monitoring
arrangements should be in place, involving local
employers and workers organizations
Workshops should be carefully chosen and placement of
a large number of trainees in one workshop should be
avoided
There should be some simple training for the workshop
owners in training skills, occupational safety and health,
and terms of the contract
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Youth Employment Network (YEN)
The UN Secretary-General established a Youth
Employment Network (YEN) in 2002 with the
United Nations, the ILO and the World Bank as
core partners
One of the main objectives is to assist countries
in developing national action plans on youth
employment
The national action plans provide an opportunity
for mainstreaming child labour concerns in a
relevant policy framework that enjoys significant
political support
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Questions for discussion
1.What are the main issues and trends in our country concerning:
youth unemployment
youth underemployment
youth working in poor working conditions
2.What is the linkage between child labour and the problems facing
youth in our country (e.g. in a specific sector or geographic
location)? How come child labour and youth unemployment co-exist
in these settings?
3.What education and training policies could help to improve the
situation; for example, skills training programmes for youth,
promoting safe work for youth, etc.?
4.Do you have examples of good practices on skills training and
efforts to promote youth employment?
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 8
The education
sector plan
and child labour
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Session aim
To consider opportunities of
mainstreaming child labour through
Education Sector Plans
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Sector programmes
A sector programme encompasses:
an overall strategic framework for a sector
a sectoral medium-term expenditure framework
an annual budget
Sector programmes with action plans should link
to the national poverty reduction strategy or the
National Development Plan
Underlying causes and consequences of child
labour must be included at the sector analysis
stage
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Education sector plan
A single, country-led education sector plan is
regarded as the main delivery vehicle for the
global compact on education
Should address key constraints to accelerating
education in the areas of policy, data, capacity,
and financing
Should align primary education priorities with
those for pre-school, secondary, tertiary, and
non-formal education
Prerequisite for accession to the Global
Partnership for Education
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Guidelines for education
sector plans (ESP)
The ESP should provide a costed strategy for
accelerated progress towards education for all
… identify policy actions to improve education
… provide a strategy for addressing HIV and AIDS,
gender equality and other key issues
… identify capacity constraints and strategies to address
them
… review the total domestic and external resources
available to implement the sector plan and estimate the
additional resource requirements
… indicate how the country intends to carry out
monitoring and evaluation and identify annual targets for
measuring progress
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Child labour in education sector plans
National authorities need to recognize that
specific population groups face particular barriers
in accessing education
Sector plans should identify steps to be taken to
tackle barriers and to reach the excluded groups
In this way, efforts to provide education for all
and to eliminate child labour can mutually
reinforce each other
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Equity and inclusion guidelines
Issues of gender, disability, and HIV/AIDS can
be sources of exclusion, and often may be linked
with the challenges facing child labourers > a
coordinated response to exclusion is often
valuable
Global Task Force on Child Labour and
Education for All (GTF) proposed that agencies
cooperate on the development of a common tool
for tackling exclusion and promoting equity >
Guidelines were developed through the network
of the UN Girls Education Initiative (UN.GEI)
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Poverty reduction strategies
Broad national development plans that propose how
to reduce poverty nationwide
Results-oriented, containing targets and indicators
Usually set within a three- to five-year time frame
Focus on economic growth and employment as a
requirement for poverty reduction
Leadership of national government, including
national consultation and international support
Opportunity to align child labour elimination
initiatives and allocate resources
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Financing of education
Economic benefits of eliminating child labour are
estimated to outweighs cost by 7 to 1
However: Substantial resources are required to
eliminate all direct costs of education and reduce
indirect costs > increase public sector resources
Other potential sources of financing: budgetary
transfers, debt relief, development assistance
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Tasks for group work
1.Analyse the national education sector
plan: Is child labour properly
mainstreamed?
2.Develop recommendations on how to
improve child labour mainstreaming in
the Plan
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
SESSION 9
Working together
to strengthen education
and tackle child labour
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Session aim
To consider the importance of
strengthening dialogue among
stakeholders to eliminate child labour and
strengthen education
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
The challenge of coordination
Multi-sectoral approach to child labour is
necessary for a coherent response
Find ways to help various Government
departments perceive and address the problem
as part of their work
Important to share data and information
Incentives may be needed to improve the
coordination of different branches of Government
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Strengthening dialogue
between ministries
Ministries involved: Education, Labour,
Finance, Health, Social Protection, Justice
National structure to bring together various
Ministries concerned: National Steering
Committee or National Action Committee
Review whether this structure is working
effectively
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Questions for group work (1/2)
1.Which line Ministries or Departments in your country deal with
issues of child labour, education, exclusion or child protection?
Are there mechanisms to exchange information? How could
dialogue among Ministries be improved?
2.Which specific structures for dealing with child labour and
education issues exist at national, district and local levels? How
well are they functioning? What could be done to enhance their
impact?
Mainstreaming child labour concerns in education sector plans and programmes
Questions for group work (2/2)
3.What other stakeholders should be involved, and how?
4.What other recommendations that may not yet have
been captured during the workshop are there for
moving forward in strengthening education and tackling
child labour?