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Browsing CRY MEDIA ARTICLE by Subject "Child Labour"
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Item 10 facts you must know about child labour in India on Anti Child Labour Day(Child Rights and You (CRY), 2018-06) Moitra, SohaWe pass by so many children indulging in some work or the other every day. The sight has been growing on us slowly but surely to the extent that we have accepted the situation as ‘normal’ in India. Some of us who want to justify it come up with statements like “Poverty is the reason they are into labour”, or “They are only helping their parents in bringing in a stable income”.Item 15 to 18 year-olds working(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2018-06-13) Marwaha, PujaOur society often confuses adolescents as 'adults' and unfortunately pushes them into a world of work which they are not prepared for.Item In Shattered Post-Lockdown Economy, Govt Must Keep a Strict Eye on Child Labour(Child Rights and You (CRY), 2020-06-16) Mahara, Priti; Sapkal, RahulAccording to estimates by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA), the world economy is projected to shrink by 3.2% this year. The estimates also state that GDP in developed countries is likely to shrink by five percent, while that of developing countries will contract by around 0.7% in 2020. Massive job losses will push an additional 34.3 million people into extreme poverty by the end of this year. Compared to developed countries, poverty, lack of access to employment opportunities and weak social security systems have induced large-scale distress in developing countries like India.Item Musings on the Independence of the Other India(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2018-08-15) Marwaha, PujaAfter 71 years of independence, 1 in 11 children in India is a child labourer, 1 in every 3 is malnourished, only 3 in every 10 children complete education age-appropriatelyItem Of unlocking doors and other possibilities: why fighting child labour is of paramount importance(Social Story Magazine, 2018-07-05) Marwaha, PujaMany of us often equate education with wearing a school uniform, picking up a bag full of books, getting attendance marked, and acing examinations. But what we tend to forget about is its potential to unlock doors. Yes, we’re talking about doors which, when unlocked, can lead children to tap their hidden potential – doors to a future that is not bound by limitations of ignorance, and by limited capacity to make independent choices. Education can actually turn around lives, and how...Item Of Unlocking The Doors And Other Possibilities(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2018-07-05) Marwaha, PujaMany of us often equate Education with wearing a school uniform, picking up a bag full of books, getting attendance marked and acing examinations. But what we tend to forget about is its potential to unlock doors. Yes, we’re talking about doors, which, when unlocked, can lead children to tap their hidden potential – doors to a future that is not bound by limitations of ignorance, and by limited capacity to make independent choices. Education can actually turn around lives, and how...Item One More Child in School Is One Less Child Labourer(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2018-06-18) Marwaha, Pujaas per census 2011 data 73% of the 33 million working children in india in the age group of 5-18 yearsdo not go to school. 359 million children in the same age group, 33 million children are working and 24 million of them don’t attend educational institutions. This is report of cry for different truths.Item A pandemic cannot justify child labour(Child Rights and You (CRY), 2020-08-25) Marwaha, PujaFor the past five months, our screens have been flooded with distressing imagery of one catastrophe after another: From the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on vulnerable communities, to cyclones in West Bengal, Odisha, and Maharashtra. From locust attacks in the central and northwestern plains, to the floods in Assam and Bihar. All of these have had disastrous effects on the Indian economy—millions in the country lost their jobs or were forced to take pay cuts, economic activity in rural India came to a halt, and migrants were forced to walk hundreds of kilometres back home. Amidst these ‘visible’ problems, there are other issues that have remained ‘invisible’. One such issue is the effect of the pandemic on children, specifically, an increased risk of child labour.Item A Pandemic Cannot Justify Child Labour(Child Rights and You (CRY), 2020-09-02) Marwaha, PujaFor the past five months, our screens have been flooded with distressing imagery of one catastrophe after another: From the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on vulnerable communities, to cyclones in West Bengal, Odisha, and Maharashtra.Item A Spark of Hope That Unites the Two Worlds(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2016) Marwaha, PujaItem This World Day Against Child Labour, let's learn about the children who don't get their childhood(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2018-06-09) Marwaha, Pujachildren who drop out of school and are pushed into work, continue to perpetuate the cycle of poverty, while missing out on a healthy childhoodItem Towards Complete Elimination of Child Labour(CRY - Child Rights & You, 2016) Marwaha, PujaUnless a child-friendly perspective is incorporated, children will continue to lose out on multiple counts in addition to their childhood being taken away from them