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The COVID-19 consequences on child labour in agrifood systems

Analytical paper










FAO. 2022. The COVID-19 consequences on child labour in agrifood systems – Analytical paper. Rome.




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    Les conséquences de la covid-19 sur le travail des enfants dans les systèmes agroalimentaires
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    Ce document fournit des informations et des preuves sur la manière dont la pandémie de covid-19 et les réponses politiques connexes pour freiner sa propagation influencent le risque de travail des enfants dans l'agriculture par différentes voies. Il s'appuie sur des études de cas dans sept pays couvrant différents systèmes de production, notamment: Côte d'Ivoire (cacao), Éthiopie (élevage et agriculture), (Liban (horticulture et serres), Philippines (pêcheries municipales) et Viet Nam (agriculture, élevage et filières agrumes). Sur la base de ces preuves, le document fournit des réflexions et des recommandations sur les domaines prioritaires concernant la génération de connaissances et la collecte de données, les réponses politiques (protection sociale, éducation) et les réponses au niveau des ménages et des communautés.
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    The relations between climate change and child labour in agriculture
    Evidence on children’s work trends after climate-related events in Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Nepal and Peru
    2023
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    Climate change-related events undermine children’s educational attainment, exposing them to child labour, hazardous work and forced migration. This nexus is particularly relevant for agriculture and its subsectors: indeed, they absorb about 26 percent of the economic impacts of climate change-related disasters and host 70 percent of all child labour. This study aims to identify the extent to which climate change-related events and impacts affect child labour in agriculture by exploring the underlying connection between the two challenges as the initial step towards integrating a child labour lens within the international community’s work on climate change. It showcases the multi-dimensional relationship through a mixed-methods approach in four countries: Côte d'Ivoire, Ethiopia, Nepal and Peru. The qualitative and quantitative findings propose a set of policy implications that are in line with the concept that one-size-fits-all policy prescriptions are unlikely to work, as they must be tailored to different communities based on their characteristics.
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    Agricultural mechanization and child labour in developing countries
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    The FAO-IFPRI study, focuses on the use of tractors because they are among the most versatile farm mechanization tools and are universal power sources for all other driven implements and equipment in agriculture, with significant potential to replace animal draught power and human power, including children’s muscle power. Tractor use is typically also the first type of machine-powered equipment in use at lower levels of agricultural development, the context where most child labour is found. Mechanization is mostly assumed to reduce child labour, as it is expected to be labour saving in general. Yet, this is not always the case, as it has also been observed that the use of tractors and other machinery could increase children’s engagement in farm activities. This may be the case if, for instance, their use allows farms to cultivate larger areas, or if it leads to shifting chores of work from hired labor to family workers, e.g. for weeding edges of farmland not reachable by machinery. Evidence has been scant thus far, but the few available studies have mostly lent greater support to the hypothesis that mechanization reduces children’s productive engagement. Most available studies have focused on specific cases and based on scant data. The new FAO-IFPRI study provides a rigorous quantitative assessment for seven developing countries in Asia (India, Nepal and Viet Nam) and sub-Saharan Africa (Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria and Tanzania) based on comparable farm household survey data.

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