Publication: Child Labor : A Normative Perspective
Date
2003-05
ISSN
Published
2003-05
Author(s)
Satz, Debra
Abstract
Examining child labor through the lenses
of weak agency, distributive inequality, and harm suggests
that not all work performed by children is equally morally
objectionable. Some work, especially work that does not
interfere with or undermine their health or education, may
allow children to develop skills they need to become
well-functioning adults and broaden their future
opportunities. Other work, including child prostitution and
bonded labor, is unambiguously detrimental to children.
Eliminating these forms of child labor should be the highest
priority. Blanket bans on all child labor may drive families
to choose even worse options for their children, however.
Moreover, child labor is often a symptom of other problems
poverty, inadequate education systems, discrimination within
families, ethnic conflicts, inadequately protected human
rights, weak democratic institutions that will not be
eliminated by banning child labor.
Link to Data Set
Citation
“Satz, Debra. 2003. Child Labor : A Normative Perspective. World Bank Economic Review. © Washington, DC: World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17180 License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO.”
Report Series
Other publications in this report series
Journal
Journal
World Bank Economic Review
1564-698X
Journal Volume
Journal Volume
Journal Issue
Journal Issue
Collections
Associated URLs
Associated content
Citations
-
Cited 37 times in Scopus (View citations)