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Women's Rights and Children's Rights

The United Nations conventions as compatible and complementary international treaties
Women's Rights and Children's Rights: The United Nations conventions as compatible and complementary international treaties

Author(s)

Savitri Goonesekere

 

This title is ONLY available in PDF format and can be downloaded from this page.

Publication date: 1

Publication series:
Innocenti Occasional Papers, Child Rights Series

No. of pages: 44

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More in this series: Innocenti Occasional Papers, Child Rights Series

School-related Economic Incentives in Latin America:  Reducing drop-out and repetition and combating child labour
Publication

School-related Economic Incentives in Latin America: Reducing drop-out and repetition and combating child labour

This paper examines the barriers to educational achievement presented by child labour and the formal education systems of Latin America. Parents put pressure on children to work rather than study, and historically the formal education systems have had no safeguards to remedy the resulting knowledge gaps.
Exploring Alternative Approaches to Combating Child Labour: Case studies from developing countries
Publication

Exploring Alternative Approaches to Combating Child Labour: Case studies from developing countries

A Child Belongs to Everyone: Law, family and the construction of the best interests of the child in Zimbabwe
Publication

A Child Belongs to Everyone: Law, family and the construction of the best interests of the child in Zimbabwe

The Relationship between Education and Child Work
Publication

The Relationship between Education and Child Work

Millions of children throughout the developing world work. Not all child work should be cause for concern. Some work activities develop practical knowledge and skills and reinforce children's sense of self-esteem and unity with their families. It is children's work that is exploitative and dangerous ('child labour') that poses a major human rights and socio-economic challenge. Universal primary education may be the single most effective instrument for meeting this challenge,