Child Labor Prevention
Child Labor Prevention - ESG Hub comprehensive reference
Child Labor Prevention - ESG Hub comprehensive reference
Child labor affects an estimated 160 million children globally as of 2024, with 79 million engaged in hazardous work harmful to health, safety, or development.1 Child labor persists in agriculture (70% of child labor), services, and manufacturing, with supply chain child labor creating legal, reputational, and operational risks for companies. International standards including ILO Conventions 138 (minimum age) and 182 (worst forms of child labor) establish expectations for child labor elimination, with corporate responsibility intensifying through due diligence requirements, investor engagement, and consumer activism.
Child labor is defined by international conventions and varies by age and work type.2 ILO Convention 138 establishes minimum working age of 15 (14 in developing countries), with light work permitted from age 13 (12 in developing countries) and hazardous work prohibited below age 18. ILO Convention 182 defines worst forms of child labor including slavery, trafficking, forced labor, prostitution, illicit activities, and hazardous work harmful to health, safety, or morals, requiring immediate elimination. Hazardous work includes work with dangerous machinery, chemicals, extreme temperatures, heavy loads, or long hours interfering with education.
Child labor reflects poverty, inadequate education access, cultural norms, weak law enforcement, and household economic pressures.3 Poverty is primary driver, with families relying on children's income for survival. Education barriers including cost, distance, and quality limit alternatives to work. Cultural norms in some contexts view child work as normal or beneficial. Weak enforcement of child labor laws enables violations. Seasonal agriculture creates demand for child labor during harvest. Informal economy employment escapes regulation. Supply chain pressures for low costs may incentivize child labor use.
Child labor risks vary by sector.4 Agriculture has highest prevalence, particularly in cocoa, coffee, cotton, tobacco, and sugarcane, with family farms and seasonal work creating risks. Mining including artisanal and small-scale mining employs children in hazardous conditions. Manufacturing risks include apparel, footwear, and home-based work. Services including domestic work, street vending, and hospitality face risks. Waste picking exposes children to hazardous materials.
Companies are expected to conduct due diligence preventing and addressing child labor.5 Risk assessment involves identifying high-risk supply chain tiers, geographies, and commodities. Prevention includes supplier codes prohibiting child labor, age verification systems, and addressing root causes through education support and family income programs. Detection involves age verification audits, worker interviews, and community engagement. Remediation when child labor is found requires immediate removal from work, provision of education and support, family income support to prevent economic hardship, and corrective action plans addressing root causes. Responsible remediation avoids simply terminating employment without addressing children's needs or family economic pressures.
Child labor prevention faces implementation challenges.6 Detection difficulties arise from hidden work, false documentation, and audit limitations. Remediation dilemmas include balancing immediate removal with family economic needs and ensuring children access education rather than moving to worse work. Root cause complexity means that supply chain interventions alone may be insufficient without addressing poverty and education access. Best practices include supporting education access, providing family income alternatives, engaging communities and local organizations, addressing purchasing practices that create cost pressures, and long-term commitment to systemic change rather than quick fixes.
ILO resources at ilo.org/childlabour. UNICEF guidance at unicef.org.
ILO & UNICEF (2021). "Child Labour: Global Estimates 2020." Geneva: ILO. ↩
ILO (1973). "Convention 138." Geneva: International Labour Organization. ↩
Edmonds, E.V. (2008). "Child Labor." In Handbook of Development Economics, Vol. 4. ↩
ILO (2017). "Global Estimates of Child Labour." Geneva: ILO. ↩
ILO & IOE (2015). "Child Labour Guidance Tool for Business." Geneva: ILO. ↩
O'Kane, C. (2012). "The Development of Participatory Techniques." In Research with Children, Sage. ↩