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CLARISSA Research and Evidence Paper 19

Neighbourhoods of the Worst Forms of Child Labour: Centring Children’s Experiences and Perceptions

Published on 1 October 2024

This research and evidence paper fills a critical gap in understanding how spatial and relationship neighbourhood dynamics contribute to and perpetuate worst forms of child labour from children’s perspectives. Most existing literature related to children’s work focuses on the determinants of child labour and the prevalence of child labour in relation to economic factors and cultural factors. Until recently, there has been little exploration of the role that neighbourhood dynamics play in child labour.

This paper, based on evidence collected during five years of the CLARISSA programme (Child Labour: Action-Research-Innovation in South and South-Eastern Asia), focuses on how child labourers experience their neighbourhoods and how the characteristics of their neighbourhoods create worst forms of child labour. It brings together findings across the programme and proposes that understanding the worst forms of child labour requires engaging with the neighbourhood dynamics in which they exist.

Cite this publication

Cannon, M. et al. (2024) Neighbourhoods of the Worst Forms of Child Labour: Centring Children’s Experiences and Perceptions, CLARISSA Research and Evidence Paper 19, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/CLARISSA.2024.037

Authors

Mariah Cannon

Researcher

Danny Burns

Professorial Research Fellow

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.19088/CLARISSA.2024.037
isbn
978-1-80470-204-8
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Bangladesh Nepal

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