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Children’s Work, Schooling, And Welfare In Latin America
Contributors
By David Post
Formats and Prices
Price
$45.00Format
Format:
Trade Paperback $45.00This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around November 15, 2001. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.
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From the 1980s through the 1990s, children in many areas of the world benefited from new opportunities to attend school, but they also faced new demands to support their families because of continuing and, for many, worsening poverty. Children’s Work, Schooling, And Welfare In Latin America is a comparative study of children, ages 12-17, in three different Latin American societies. Using nationally-representative household surveys from Chile, Peru, and Mexico, and repeatedly over different survey years, David Post documents tendencies for children to become economically active, to remain in school, or to do both. The survey data analyzed illustrates the roles of family and regional poverty, and parental resources, in determining what children did with their time in each country. However, rather than to treat children’s activities merely as demographic phenomena, or in isolation of the policy environment, Post also scrutinizes the international differences in education policies, labor law, welfare spending, and mobilization for children’s rights. Children's Work shows that child labor will not vanish of its own accord, nor follow a uniform path even within a common geographic region. Accordingly, there is a role for welfare policy and for popular mobilization. Post indicates that, even when children attend school, as in Peru or Mexico, many students will continue to work to support the family. If the consequence of their work is to impede their educational success, then schools will need to attend to a new dimension of inequality: that between part-time and full-time students.
Genre:
- On Sale
- Nov 15, 2001
- Page Count
- 304 pages
- Publisher
- Avalon Publishing
- ISBN-13
- 9780813339153
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