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Child rights: an enabling or disabling right? The Nexus between child labor and poverty in Bangladesh

Child rights: an enabling or disabling right? The Nexus between child labor and poverty in Bangladesh
Child rights: an enabling or disabling right? The Nexus between child labor and poverty in Bangladesh
The research reported in this article demonstrates the centrality of poverty and the structures of political economy to the prevalence of child labor in Bangladesh. This article examines the context of child laborers in Bangladesh and challenges the uncritical application of the social and cultural rights discourse to conditions where poverty and economic injustice are endemic. The authors argue the current preoccupation in development circles with cultural rights tends to disregard the fact that the economic rights of families and communities are denied, and there is a concomitant negation of the importance of poverty, material deprivation and class structures. This article indicates that the gap between the child rights discourse and poverty hampers the efforts to eradicate child labor in any comprehensive manner.
child labor, child rights, childhood, economic rights, poverty
1745-2546
359-378
Ruwanpura, K.N.
6ac0c791-abeb-484a-b747-1ecc99d3b800
Roncolata, L.
570adf98-077a-4152-bd51-15009a3b429a
Ruwanpura, K.N.
6ac0c791-abeb-484a-b747-1ecc99d3b800
Roncolata, L.
570adf98-077a-4152-bd51-15009a3b429a

Ruwanpura, K.N. and Roncolata, L. (2006) Child rights: an enabling or disabling right? The Nexus between child labor and poverty in Bangladesh. Journal of Developing Societies, 22 (4), 359-378. (doi:10.1177/0169796X06071523).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The research reported in this article demonstrates the centrality of poverty and the structures of political economy to the prevalence of child labor in Bangladesh. This article examines the context of child laborers in Bangladesh and challenges the uncritical application of the social and cultural rights discourse to conditions where poverty and economic injustice are endemic. The authors argue the current preoccupation in development circles with cultural rights tends to disregard the fact that the economic rights of families and communities are denied, and there is a concomitant negation of the importance of poverty, material deprivation and class structures. This article indicates that the gap between the child rights discourse and poverty hampers the efforts to eradicate child labor in any comprehensive manner.

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More information

Published date: December 2006
Keywords: child labor, child rights, childhood, economic rights, poverty

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 43737
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/43737
ISSN: 1745-2546
PURE UUID: 879939eb-206b-4f1b-bc0a-26a9c2cb1992

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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:57

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Contributors

Author: K.N. Ruwanpura
Author: L. Roncolata

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