The Photographs of Lewis Hine: The Industrial Revolution and Child Laborers

not directly related to India but this provides an interesting perspective

The Industrial Age that occurred after the Civil War created a demand for labor and many children were drawn into the labor force. Factory wages were so low that children often had to work to help support their families. According to the National Archives, the number of children under the age of 15 who worked in industrial jobs for wages climbed from 1.5 million in 1890 to 2 million in 1910.

Employers viewed children as a bargain: They worked in unskilled jobs for lower wages than adults, and their small hands made them more adept at handling small parts and tools.

Education was seen as a luxury, but one teacher would have a profound impact on our view of child labor. Lewis Hine, was a New York City schoolteacher and photographer, and he believed that a picture could tell a powerful story. He felt so strongly about the abuse of children as workers that he quit his teaching job and became an investigative photographer for the National Child Labor Committee.

Hine believed that if people could see for themselves the abuses and injustice of child labor, they would demand laws to end it. He often tricked his way into factories to take the pictures that factory managers did not want the public to see. He would tell factory owners that he wanted the child laborers in the photos to show the size of the modern machinery.

The National Child Labor Committee was formed in 1904, with a goal to end child labor. The organization received a charter from Congress in 1907. It hired teams of investigators to gather evidence of children working in harsh conditions and then organized exhibitions with photographs and statistics to dramatize the plight of these children. The Children’s Bureau became a federal information clearinghouse in 1912 and i 1913, the Children’s Bureau was transferred to the Department of Labor.

Lewis Hine died in poverty but his photos live on as a reminder of the horrors of child labor and, frankly, the dangers to all workers found in Industrial Age workplaces.

http://ehstoday.com/galleries/photographs-lewis-hine-industrial-revolution-and-child-laborers-photo-gallery?NL=QMN-01&Issue=QMN-01_20140411_QMN-01_240&YM_RID=anant.r.jani@gmail.com&YM_MID=1460304&sfvc4enews=42&cl=article_6

Unintended consequences of India’s child labour ban

Bans and regulations against child labour are among the most popular policy tools used to address the problem throughout the developing world. But how well do they work in practice? This column analyses the effectiveness of India’s flagship legislation against child labour, the Child Labour Act of 1986. It finds that a few years after the ban, employment levels of children under the legal working age of 14 rose relative to those of legal age.


 
Taken altogether, our results suggest that households with children 10-13 are worse off after the 1986 Act relative to those with older children – child wages fall, child employment rises, child schooling falls, and household consumption and wealth fall. 



Our findings do not discourage all forms of government-led policies against child labour.1 There are many options available to policymakers who wish to reduce the incidence of child labor such as cash transfers to families and increasing investments in education. If anything, we think a discussion in policy circles about these alternatives should be heightened since it appears from our study that child labour bans of the type instituted under the Child Labor Prohibition and Regulation Act can be ineffective. Recognising that child labour is frequently the last resort of poor households suggests an approach that is focused on reducing the supply of child labour by helping poor households rather than restricting the demand for child labour which we find will lower their incomes and can generate perverse responses.

http://ideasforindia.in/article.aspx?article_id=228

Underweight and Stunted Children: The Indian Paradox

The Union Cabinet recently approved a multi-sectoral nutritional programme proposed by the Ministry of Women and Child Development to reduce under-nutrition in 200 districts across India. The 1,213 crore initiative will incorporate several schemes to curb malnutrition among children below the age of 3 years, and tackle anaemia in young girls and lactating mothers. 

This nutrition initiative comes against the backdrop of several recent statistics and debates in the media on high levels of child malnutrition in India. In January 2012, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh released the “HUNGaMA Survey Report 2011”prepared by Naandi Foundation that covered 112 districts across India. According to the report, 42.5 per cent of children under five years of age are underweight (low weight for age); 58.8 per cent are stunted (low height for age), and 11.4 per cent are ‘wasted’ (low weight for height).

The alarming figures led Prime Minister Singh to call it a “national shame”. In the “Global Hunger Index 2013”, India scored 21.3 on the level of hunger, placing itself in the category of “alarming levels” of hunger. Apart from India, Haiti and Timor-Leste are the other two non-Sub-Saharan African countries that fall under this category. The report also highlights that South Asia is home to the largest number of hungry people in the world, followed by Sub-Saharan African countries.

Bangladesh that showed high rates of malnutrition until recent times has taken significant steps to improve nutrition, and quantity and quality of food intake. Progress has been made in cereal and non-cereal food production to ensure food security. Educational campaigns on exclusive breastfeeding and hygeine have helped the country to tackle malnutrition. In addition, Bangladesh is one of the 42 countries that are part of the “Scaling up Nutrition” (SUN) movement to implement nutrition specific approaches and interventions to curb malnutrition. India is not a part of the SUN movement.

Thus, what was previously dubbed by researches as the “Asian Enigma” to refer to the phenomenon of South Asian countries falling behind in standards of child growth despite economic growth, now seems to be modified into “Indian Enigma” or the “Indian Paradox” to reflect upon the phenomenon of India having a large number of under-weight and stunted children despite a growing economy.

The UN has estimated that about 2.1 million Indian children die before they reach the age of five years from preventable illnesses such as diarrhoea, malaria, typhoid, pneumonia and measles.

Stunted children are susceptible to infections due to a weak immune system. When they grow up to adulthood, they are likely to have a risk of obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart disease. Stunting also results in impaired cognitive ability, fatigue, loss of interest and curiousity, and failure to learn motor skills, which results in stunted children falling behind their healthier counterparts, and eventually dropping out of school.

Child malnutrition is directly related to malnutrition among women, says a study titled “Child Malnutrition and Gender Discrimination in South Asia” by Santosh Mehrotra, who is a former Regional Economic Advisor for Poverty (Asia) for UNDP. Poor health of a woman during her infancy, childhood and teenage years leads to low birth-weight of her child. Consequently, children who are born with low birth-weight often experience poor health during their infancy and childhood.

A BMI of less than 18.5 is an indicator of chronic energy deficiency. The study states that 36 per cent of Indian women fall short of that number.  The study further says that on average 52 per cent of Indian women suffer from mild, moderate or severe anaemia which is the underlying cause of maternal mortality and perinatal mortality.

“It is important to target women not only when they are pregnant, but otherwise as well,” said Dr. Amit Sengupta from Delhi Science Forum. “Women are discriminated right from birth, so by the time they reach adulthood, they are already malnourished,” he said.Santosh Mehrotra says in his study that in most poor households, women and young girls eat the leftovers after the males in the family have eaten their meals.

Another cause for stunting and under-weight children in India is aruged to be a consequence of a larger sanitation problem of open defecation. Dean Spears, a visiting researcher at the Delhi School of Economics, has argued that stunting as a phenomenon among Indian children could be linked to open defecation. Spears says that children are exposed to the germs in faeces when those germs are released in the enviornment during open defecation. This exposure to the germs causes children to suffer from diarrhoea and environmental enteropathy (causing chronic changes in the intestines of the children and preventing the body to absorb and use nutrients). Thus, leaving the children stunted.

In his study titled “Open Defecation and Childhood Stunting in India: An ecological analysis of new data from 112 districts”, Spears says that according to the 2011 Indian census, 53 per cent of Indian households did not use any kind of toilets. He further says that Bihar has had a higher rate of open defecation in the past ten years than any other country, and that Uttar Pradesh alone is home to 12 per cent of all the people worldwide who openly defecate.

He argues that the rate of open defecation in India has been higher than that of Congo, Ethiopia, Angola, Zambia, South Africa, Rwanda, Kenya, Ghana and many other Sub-Saharan African countries.

Dr. Vandana Prasad from Public Health Resource Network said, “Many factors contribute to child malnutrition. Lack of food, lack of good quality and diverse food, lack of child care services, malnutrition among the mothers, open defecation… but it becomes problematic when one reason is highlighted as the primary reason.”

newsclick.in/india/underweight-and-stunted-children-indian-paradox

How India can leapfrog to the future

The combination of cheaper devices, easy connectivity and the high aspirations of the population could help India leapfrog development in several areas. Broadband internet can transform primary and secondary schooling by bringing the best teachers and techniques into every classroom. In Reimagining India: Unlocking the Potential of Asia’s Next Superpower, edited by McKinsey & Company, digital educators Salman Khan and Shantanu Sinha argue that “replicating for hundreds of millions of aspiring learners what a few thousand previously experienced in the lecture halls of Harvard, MIT or Stanford would require an absurdly large investment. But now, this information is available to anyone with a cheap laptop and a broadband connection.” Indeed, today, Indian students are the largest users of massive open online courses from MIT and Harvard.

Healthcare offers similar possibilities. Cheap devices (GE’s X-ray costs $50), sensors and broadband connectivity will open up access to healthcare, and at lower costs than the standard brick and mortar solutions (often at a fiftieth of the comparable U.S. cost). Swasthya Slate (a tablet device for patients to perform self-diagnostic tests including electrocardiograms, blood sugar, blood pressure, and heart rate readings) and “m-steth” (mobile stethoscope to transmit heart data) are smart, affordable substitutes for over half of all doctor visits. This is life-changing in a country like India, where the doctor to patient ratio is a meager 1:1,700 (compared with 1:400 in the United States).

The same breakthrough is possible in access to all government services, retail services, banking and financial inclusion, agriculture, medical care, education at all levels and in many other fields that we haven’t even thought of yet, and may help India to drive faster inclusive development for its population. In true Indian tradition, the potential for technology to leapfrog is enormous – and so are the barriers. As experience shows, progress may be fitful, but when India can imagine, mobilize, and leapfrog, ten years can change almost anything.

http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/2013/12/29/how-india-can-leapfrog-to-the-future/

Historic WTO deal on India’s terms, food security stand prevails

an important step in the right direction, let’s just hope the subsidized food gets to those who need it most…

In a major victory for India, the World Trade Organisation or WTO on late Friday night agreed to allow countries to provide subsidy on staple food crops without any threat of punitive action

The deal allows nations such as India to fix a Minimum Support Price (MSP) for farm produce and to sell staple grains to the poor at subsidised rates. It also permits countries to store foodgrains to meet contingency requirements.

The draft agreement, which will protect the right to food and allow India to go ahead with its $20 billion food security scheme, is expected to be adopted by the plenary later in the day.

“It’s a victory for Indian farmers and farmers of the developing world. It is also recognition of the right of developing nations for public stock-holding of food grains to ensure food security for their citizens,” Mr Sharma said.

According to the proposal, all schemes providing support in relation to procurement for public stock-holding programmes for staple food crops will be protected from WTO litigation.

http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/historic-wto-deal-on-india-s-terms-food-security-stand-prevails-455488