Wednesday, May 10, 2017

CHILD LABOUR- A COMMON STUDY OF IT IN INDIA AND BANGLADESH
India and Bangladesh are very similar countries with similar issues like child labour. Both of these are South East Asian countries and have been through the rule of the British Empire. These include the similar causes like illiteracy, lack of family options, lower wages and poverty which forces them into this unbalanced world. Children are also more suited in making fireworks and locks and so is a more preferred option of labour.
          During our research we also found out that juveniles are not aware of any of the risks or the horrible conditions that they would be forced to work in.
                   UNICEF has stated that illiteracy being one of the major causes in both nations is not resolved as proven by, “In Bangladesh school attendance is virtually the same for boys and girls aged 7-14 years. In the latter, 91 per cent of 7-11 year-old girls and 90 percent of similarly aged boys are in school; and 80 per cent for girls and 76 percent for boys in the 12-14 years age range. In India, among 7-11 year old children, boys’ attendance exceeds girls’ by four percentage points, and among 12-14 year-olds, it exceeds 10 percentage points.”
                   Even though both the countries have a literacy policy ‘National Literacy policy’ by the government of Bangladesh and the ‘Right To Education’ by the Indian government. Though these laws are being violated and very little is being done by the countries to help protect the educational rights of the child.
                             Agriculture is a most common and the most densely populated sector of child labour in both the countries being 65% in Bangladesh and 80% in India.
                   Since India is a big country it has more funds in order to eradicate child labour but that is where the population kicks in as the greater the population the more children are under child labour thus the funds required are relatively greater having the same effect on the country’s ability to alleviate children.
                             The other major areas of employment of children in India are the mining and the fireworks industry whereas in Bangladesh it is the construction, industrial, as street hawkers and even as home workers thus having relatively larger sectors of child labour than India.
                             This study of the commonalities and differences between these two societies can be done on a much larger scale. This is a glimpse into how we can tackle the issue of child labour affectively by focusing on common areas of concern.
                                                                  
References

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