The Meanings and Practices of Child Labour in Old-Fadama, Accra
Date
2015-07
Authors
Bosompem, O.J
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Ghana
Abstract
Globally, children are engaged in a wide-range of activities both in the informal and the
formal sectors. Child labour has been defined by the ILO as “work that impairs children’s
well-being or hinders their education, development and future livelihoods”. In addition,
several theories and models strive to redefine and draw the pattern clear about child
labour. The main objective of the study is an assessment of the meanings and practices of
child labour in Old Fadama, in Accra, Ghana, with specific focus on examining the
meanings, practices, and causes of child labour and better provide an applicable policy to
minimize if not eradicate child labour. The study adopted qualitative study approach to
achieve the defined objectives. Through this approach, a purposive sampling techniques
was used to sample 16 interviewees (8 adults and 8 children) engaged in the practices of
child labour. Primary data was used for analysis and discussion purposes in relation to the
study objectives. The qualitative analysis techniques employed was thematic content
analysis to derive codes that were used to obtain the basic, organizing, and global themes
and to draw the thematic network systems. Findings proved that a lot of meanings have
been ascribed to child labour, these were: hardworking activity, means of survival, the
physical stage/state at which children work, specific category of children working, and
morally and ethically bad and worrying phenomenon/practices. Regarding the practices,
child labour brings about: 1) negative and positive impacts, 2) Employment Avenues, 3)
The Key Actors, 4) Working Conditions, and 5) Specific works done by boys and girls.
Finally, the study demonstrated that the root causes of child labour were pull, push and
other related factors which were allcategorised as socio-economic. The study therefore
concluded that meanings and practices of child labour in Old Fadama is socioeconomic,
widespread in the street than at home, and there is no intervention existing to weld out the
phenomenon in the study area. The study based on the conclusion to recommend social
and economic interventions with special focus on redressing poverty and bettering or
providing quality, free, and accessible educational facilities and services for the poor
individuals as the prudent immediate solution to minimise child labour in Old Fadama.
Description
Thesis(MA) - University of Ghana, 2015
Keywords
children, Child Labour, Ghana, Practices