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International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour: Home

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The future belongs to those with a vision to shape it. The ILO and its partners stand for a world where no girl or boy is forced to work at the expense of their health and development or their future prospects of decent work. A future without child labour is at last within reach. Significant progress is being made worldwide in combating child labour. The latest global estimates of trends reinforce this message of hope. However, a strong and sustained global movement is needed to provide the extra push towards eliminating the scourge of child labour. For more information see the Global Report The end of child labour: Within reach. (ILO, 2006)

What's new

  • Latest publications

    • TACKLE - Tackling child labour through education: moving children from work to school in 11 countries
      12 June 2008 - Operating in 11 countries from ACP, the IPEC's project TACKLE was launched as part of an effort to accelerate the fight against poverty and the achievement of the MDGs. Its objectives are: to strengthen legal frameworks on child labour and education; to strengthen institutional capacity to formulate and implement child labour strategies; to employ targeted actions to combat child labour; and to improve advocacy and dissemination of good practices to enhance the knowledge base on child labour and education.
    • Child labour and education: Evidence from SIMPOC surveys
      09 June 2008 - A new working paper analyzing a diverse sample of SIMPOC national survey data from all world regions. The authors review evidence of the impact of child labour on education, emphasizing the effects of child labour on school attendance, grade repetition, dropout, literacy achievements and overall human capital accumulation.
    • Combating child labour through education
      05 June 2008 - This booklet provides an overview of IPEC’s work on child labour related to education and to broader ILO concerns on training and skills development.
    • Prevention of child recruitment and reintegration of children associated with armed forces and groups: Strategic framework for addressing the economic gap
      05 June 2008 - This strategic framework offers guidance to those involved in addressing the economic aspects of child recruitment and reintegration of children associated with armed forces and groups. It brings together knowledge, lessons and good practices developed, tested and validated during the implementation of the ILO Inter-regional Programme on the Prevention and Reintegration of Children Involved in Armed Conflict.
    • Guidelines on the design of direct action strategies to combat commercial sexual exploitation of children
      05 June 2008 - These guidelines provide project designers and managers with a simple toolkit for selecting the most appropriate strategies and actions to combat commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) at the community level. They include examples, do’s and don’ts and good practices from IPEC’s field experience of and that of its partners worldwide. Concise background material on many of the difficult and sensitive issues concerning CSEC is also provided to help identify suitable strategies.
    • Modern policy and legislative responses to child labour
      05 May 2008 - This guide examines of modern responses to child labour as embodied in policy and legislation. It covers where and how the lines have been drawn between the types and arrangements of work that have no harmful effect on children and those that do; how countries have expressed their antipathy to child labour and created institutions to combat it; how governments have responded to children not getting a proper education; and how governments have responded to adults¿ exploitation of child labour.
    • Child labour: Cause and effect of the perpetuation of poverty
      05 June 2008 - This study provides recommendations for mainstreaming child labour issues into national development and poverty reduction strategies in Latin American countries in view of their international commitments on the subject. It covers the Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Uruguay and Venezuela. (In Spanish.)
    • The Mekong Challenge: Winding Roads – Young migrants from Lao PDR and their vulnerability to human trafficking
      05 June 2008 - An analysis of data from the Lao PDR Migration Survey of 2003, this report investigates the motives, family circumstances, and socio-economic and educational status of young migrants who had returned from working in Thailand. It correlates these variables with trafficking and labour exploitation in an effort to assess the vulnerability of young migrants to abuse.
    • The Mekong Challenge: 41 Brothels – Prostitution, trafficking and human rights in Sihanouk Ville, Cambodia
      05 June 2008 - This survey is part of a series of studies into recruitment practices and working conditions in the Greater Mekong Sub-region of children and young women in sectors vulnerable to human trafficking for labour exploitation. It goes to the heart of one of Cambodia’s fastest-growing tourist areas to investigate the situation of vulnerable young people engaged in prostitution.
    • IPEC action against child labour 2006-2007: Progress and future priorities
      10 March 2008 - IPEC's implementation report for the biennium 2006-07, highlighting the Programme's activites worldwide. The report also reflects upon IPEC's work during its fifteen years of existence and the ILO's vision of eliminating all worst forms of child labour by 2016.
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