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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Child labour in Addis Ketema, Ethiopia : a study in mental health /

Fekadu Wolde-Giorgis, Daniel, January 2008 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Umeå : Umeå universitet, 2008. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
12

Arbetare om barnarbete : En kvantitativ mikrohistoria om uppväxtrelaterade omständigheter och hushållsekonomiska förutsättningar som estimatorer för ålder vid arbetsdebut / Labourers on child labour : A quantitative micro history on family circumstances and household economic conditions as estimators for age at starting to work.

Ekström, Daniel January 2024 (has links)
Children have always worked. Long before the industrial breakthrough and labour saving mechanical capital, children was an indispensable part of the production process, not at least in the household- and rural organization of work. However, with the industrial age came new possibilities for children and youth to work outside the household structure and sell their labour at markets rates. Herby, more than ever before, children hade the prospect of enring money and become a secondary breadwinner, next to the household’s primary provider of income. The research on the subject has to this point been focused conventional sources - such as government reports and factory inspections – and turned a blind eye to the main characters of the history of child labour, namely the children. Hence, the main purpose of this essay is to turn the methodological convention on its head and give attention to the household, in respect to child labour, and provide the children themselves with subjectivity and a historical voice. This will be done mainly through a micro historical study of the households social and economic prerequisites as determinants to at what age children started to work.
13

Working children's experiences and their right to health and well-being /

Rubenson, Birgitta, January 2005 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karol. inst., 2005. / Härtill 5 uppsatser.
14

”Och de barn som arbetade där växte upp till att bli starka, friska och mer långlivade…” : En studie om barnarbete på Transjö glasbruk 1880-1930 / “And the children who worked there grew up to be strong, healthy and more long-lived…” : A study on child labour at Transjö glass factory 1880-1930

Johansson, Moa January 2021 (has links)
In this study, I will examine how child labour occurred and changed at Transjö glass factory between 1880-1930. The study is based on how family constellations, class differences amongst parents and the need affected the existence of child labour. It is the families with child labourers that will be examined to discover how child labour occurred and what might have been the reasons for it. There was a strong difference between the superior child labourers for whom the work was apprentice based and the inferior child labourers who worked to contribute to the family economy. The conclusions that have emerged are that family constellations, family needs, glass factory needs, and class difference between employees all are parts that contribute to and help explain how child labour could occur in a glass factory.
15

The perception of children’srights in Paraguayan press : <em>A study of how Unicef communicates with </em><em>journalists concerning child street-workers</em> / : <em></em>

Joleby, Elin, Konstadinidis, Anastasia January 2009 (has links)
<p>This study focused on the level of success Unicef in Paraguay had in communicating its message concerning child street-workers to the press in Asunción. We also examined how the communication works between Unicef and the journalists, and how child street-workers appear in the press according to our sources. We based our study on the theoretical understanding of media logic and planned communication. These theories were useful to explain the possibilities and obstacles Unicef faces in its communication with the press. Our study builds on qualitative research interviews with journalists, communication staff at Unicef and the coordinator of the Global Agency of News, an organization that monitors how children appear in the Paraguayan press.</p><p> </p><p>We found that the communication between Unicef and the journalists is very important and highly valued by both Unicef and the Paraguayan newspapers. The relationship builds on constant trade, where both parts depend on each other. Unicef needs attention from the press in order to spread its message to the general public. The journalists need Unicef because the organization works as a trustable information source to back-up their articles regarding childhood.</p><p> </p><p>No one in our study was satisfied with the way child street-workers appear in the press. The children are often showed as victims or criminals and children’s rights are not always considered. A central problem is that awareness about children’s rights is low, both in the Paraguayan society and among many journalists. Unicef succeeds quite well in their communication with the journalists that are already aware of children’s rights. But the organization does not succeed in communicating with a big part of the press, as a lot of articles are still discriminative towards child street-workers.</p>
16

The perception of children’srights in Paraguayan press : A study of how Unicef communicates with journalists concerning child street-workers / :

Joleby, Elin, Konstadinidis, Anastasia January 2009 (has links)
This study focused on the level of success Unicef in Paraguay had in communicating its message concerning child street-workers to the press in Asunción. We also examined how the communication works between Unicef and the journalists, and how child street-workers appear in the press according to our sources. We based our study on the theoretical understanding of media logic and planned communication. These theories were useful to explain the possibilities and obstacles Unicef faces in its communication with the press. Our study builds on qualitative research interviews with journalists, communication staff at Unicef and the coordinator of the Global Agency of News, an organization that monitors how children appear in the Paraguayan press.   We found that the communication between Unicef and the journalists is very important and highly valued by both Unicef and the Paraguayan newspapers. The relationship builds on constant trade, where both parts depend on each other. Unicef needs attention from the press in order to spread its message to the general public. The journalists need Unicef because the organization works as a trustable information source to back-up their articles regarding childhood.   No one in our study was satisfied with the way child street-workers appear in the press. The children are often showed as victims or criminals and children’s rights are not always considered. A central problem is that awareness about children’s rights is low, both in the Paraguayan society and among many journalists. Unicef succeeds quite well in their communication with the journalists that are already aware of children’s rights. But the organization does not succeed in communicating with a big part of the press, as a lot of articles are still discriminative towards child street-workers.
17

Barnhem för flickor : barn, familj och institutionsliv i Stockholm 1870-1920 /

Söderlind, Ingrid, January 1900 (has links)
Diss. Linköping : Univ.
18

Barn i Afrikas gruvor : En studie om socialt arbete mot barnarbete i Afrika med barnkonventionen som utgångspunkt / Children in African mines : A study about social work against child labour in Africa with the Convention on the Rights of the Child used as basis

Gull, Vilma, Hessne, Hanna January 2022 (has links)
Denna studie beskriver utmaningar för socialt arbete mot barnarbete inom ASM-gruvarbete i Afrika. Detta är gjort genom en strukturerad litteraturöversikt där nio av 192 artiklar valdes ut, vilka tillsammans redovisar en översikt av existerande data. Uppsatsen är ämnad att tematiskt analysera omständigheter kring barnarbete i gruvor i Afrika, och hur förhållandet gällande socialt arbete mellan västerländska och afrikanska länder kan förstås avseende barn som arbetar med mineralbrytning i Afrika. Förhållandet mellan Afrika och västvärlden konkretiseras genom Demokratiska republiken Kongo (DRK) och koboltkedjan. Utgångspunkten för studien är barnkonventionen. Analysen diskuterar vad som behöver tas i beaktning för att uppnå hållbara förändringar. Studiens slutsats är att perspektiv på barnets bästa och barnarbete skiljer sig beroende på social kontext, vilket leder till utmaningar för socialt arbete mot barnarbete. Samarbetet mellan västvärlden och Afrika behöver stärkas än mer för att uppnå hållbar utveckling. / This study depicts challenges in social work against child labour in artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) in sub-Saharan Africa. It is made through a structured review where nine of 192 articles were selected, which together provides an overview of existing data. The paper is aimed to thematically analyze circumstances of child labour in mines in Africa, and how the relationship of social work between Western and African countries can be understood regarding children mining in Africa. The relationship between Africa and the Western world is concretized through the Democratic republic of Congo (DRC) and the cobalt chain. The approach in this article is based on the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The analysis discusses what should be considered to achieve sustainable changes. It concludes perspectives on best interest of the child and child labour differs depending on the social context, leading to challenges for social work against child labour. Greater cooperation between the western world and Africa is needed for sustainable development.

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