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- Title
Child Labour in African Artisanal Mining Communities: Experiences from Northern Ghana.
- Authors
Hilson, Gavin
- Abstract
The issue of child labour in the artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) economy is attracting significant attention worldwide. This article critically examines this ‘problem’ in the context of sub-Saharan Africa, where a lack of formal sector employment opportunities and/or the need to provide financial support to their impoverished families has led tens of thousands of children to take up work in this industry. The article begins by engaging with the main debates on child labour in an attempt to explain why young boys and girls elect to pursue arduous work in ASM camps across the region. The remainder of the article uses the Ghana experience to further articulate the challenges associated with eradicating child labour at ASM camps, drawing upon recent fieldwork undertaken in Talensi-Nabdam District, Upper East Region. Overall, the issue of child labour in African ASM communities has been diagnosed far too superficially, and until donor agencies and host governments fully come to grips with the underlying causes of the poverty responsible for its existence, it will continue to burgeon.
- Subjects
GHANA; SUB-Saharan Africa; MINES &; mineral resources; MINERAL industries; CHILD labor; POVERTY; INTERNATIONAL Labour Organisation; GOLD mining; CHILD labor laws; SOCIAL history; SOCIAL conditions in Africa
- Publication
Development & Change, 2010, Vol 41, Issue 3, p445
- ISSN
0012-155X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1467-7660.2010.01646.x