This Guide is designed for the Government unit tasked with organizing and facilitating the Tripartite Consultations that will result in either a new or a revised list of hazardous child labour for the country.
Format to identify and document good practices on child labour in agriculture: 1. It?s all about community: Working together to improve occupational health and safety through child labour monitoring systems; 2. Labour saving technologies and corporate social responsibility in tobacco production
The aim of this research was to enhance stakeholders understanding of the IABA, document the intervention model and identify emerging good practice that the model reflected thus far. Overall, the study revealed that understanding of the IABA by the different stakeholders was a gradual process. An IABA to engaging with norms and belief systems that condone child labour and leveraging existing community resources and structures are key.
In this report, good practices were identifi ed and documented from what had been developed within the Framework of the project "Support for the Proposed Sub-Programme to Eliminate the Worst Forms of Child Labour: Time Bound Measures", implemented from October 2005 to May 2010 by the ILO's International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) in Mongolia (MON0550USA_FTPR_1009_Annex D)
In the fight against child trafficking in West Africa, local community volunteers are engaged in monitoring the wellbeing of children and mobilizing the communities to take action against trafficking. Since 2005, they have repatriated 430 children and more than 3,500 children have been re-enrolled in public school or vocational centres after being taken away from their homes for exploitative work.
As a result of a well-established child labour monitoring system in Tanzania, numerous children involved in child labour in tobacco farms have been identified and removed from their work.
Various stakeholders in village communities in Nepal are playing an active part in the fight against child labour. Through training and by monitoring households, they are committed to keep their villages child labour free.
As a result of awareness-rising and child labour monitoring, the number of children in hazardous work in the fishing industry in Indonesia has decreased dramatically.