Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-8bljj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-20T12:22:26.506Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Child Labour and Employment Relations Legislation in India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2023

Ashraf U. Kazi*
Affiliation:
IT Law, Department of Business Law And Taxation, Monash University, Churchill, Victoria, Australia 3842

Abstract

The global trend towards the removal of child labour began in the nineteenth century and continues into the twenty-first century, yet estimates of children working in India range up to 100 million. Though the Indian government prohibits employment of children in factories, there is no law to prohibit employment of children in family households, cottage industries and family owned agricultural fields or family businesses, and large numbers of children miss school to look after cattle, collect firewood or work infields, restaurants or quarries. The framers of the Constitution of India were aware of their responsibility towards children and a number of provisions were made to protect children. This article focuses on legislation since 1938, prohibiting the labour of children aged below fifteen years. Defects in the legislation and weak enforcement machinery have meant that children working in family-owned industries and agricultural fields continue to escape attention. The small earning of a child have been seen as a means of survival for a large number of families in India. The article is primarily a historical piece, tracing this regulatory failure through five decades of independence and freedom in which lives of children, born free but bonded for life in the largest democracy in the world. This paper will provide the basis for assessing the degree of change for children, as India becomes one of the world's fastest growing economies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

Dr. (Mrs). Ashraf U. Kazi teaches company law, information technology law, contract Law, business Law and law of business organisations and taught labour and industrial law in the Post-Graduate Department of Law, Bangalore University, India for ten years.

References

Albrow, M., King, E. (1990) Globalization, Knowledge and Society: Readings from International Sociology, Sage Publications, London.Google Scholar
Anker, R. (2000) ‘The Economics of Child Labour: A Framework for Measurement’, International Labour Review, 139(3): 257280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bachpan Bachao Andolan (Save Children Revolution) News (2006) New Delhi, 26 June: 14.Google Scholar
Bhagwati, J. (2004a) India in Transition: Freeing the Economy, Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bhagwati, J. (2004b) In Defense of Globalization, Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Burra, N. (1995) Born to Work: Child Labour in India, Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Dateline NBC (2002) Slaves to Fashion, broadcast June 23, [Online] Available: www.msnbc.com/news.Google Scholar
Herald, Deccan , (2000) Bangalore, Karnataka, India, June 14: 114.Google Scholar
Foster, P. (2005) ‘Aged Five: This Boy Works In a Police Station to Keep his Family Fed’, The Daily Telegraph, United Kingdom, 15 June.Google Scholar
Gupte, S. (1985) Child Labour, ICCW News Bulletin, September, 23 (3): xxv-xxvi.Google Scholar
Human Rights Watch, (2002) Interview with Raghuvanshi Lenin, People's Vigilance Committee for Human Rights, Varanasi, 12 March: 116.Google Scholar
Hunt, E.H. (1981) British Labour History 1815–1914, Humanities Press, London.Google Scholar
International Labour Organisation, (1996) ‘Child Labour: Targeting the Intolerable’, Geneva: ILO, June.Google Scholar
International Labour Organisation, ILO (1999) Convention No.182, Geneva.Google Scholar
International Labour Organisation, (1997) Methodological Child Labour Surveys And Statistics: ILO's Recent Work In Brief, ILO, Geneva.Google Scholar
Jain, S.N. (1981) ‘Child Labour’, The Journal of Indian Law Institute, 3: 342349.Google Scholar
Jani, G. (1987) ‘No Sparkle In Gem Workers' Lives', The Hindustan Times, India, 26 July.Google Scholar
Jodha, N.S., Singh, R.P. (1991) Child Labour In The Indian Subcontinent: Dimensions And Implications, Sage Publications Ltd, London.Google Scholar
Juyal, B.N. (1987) Child Labour and The Exploitation In The Carpet Industry, Indian Social Institute, New Delhi.Google Scholar
Kanbargi, R., Kulkarni, P.M. (1991) Child Work, Schooling and Fertility in Rural Karnataka, India, Sage Publications Ltd., London.Google Scholar
Labour and Employment Department, Policy Note: 2005–2006, Government of Tamil Nadu, Tamil Nadu, India.Google Scholar
Ministry of Labour & Employment, Employment of Children as Domestic Servants and in Dhabas Banned from October, (01 August 2006) Press Information Bureau, New Delhi, India.Google Scholar
Nag, M. (1983) ‘Fertility Differential in Kerala and West Bengal’, Economic and Political Weekly, Annual Number: 879890.Google Scholar
Nardinelli, C. (1990) Child Labor and The Industrial Revolution, Indiana University Press, Indianapolis.Google Scholar
Parliamentary Papers, (1878–90) Reports of the Inspectors of Factories, England.Google Scholar
Parliamentary Papers, (1834) Supplementary Report of the Factories Inquiry Commission, Part I, England, pp.1937.Google Scholar
Prembhai (1984) Report to the Supreme Court regarding Child Weavers of Mirzapur-Bhadohi-Varanasi, mimeo, Varanasi.Google Scholar
Raman, S. (2005) Misery of India's Child Sari Weavers, BBC News, Tamil Nadu, India, 29 August, pp.1–3.Google Scholar
Reddy, N.K.S. (1986) The Synopsis Of Forensic Medicine, Bangalore, India.Google Scholar
Registrar General and Census Commissioner (1983) Report and Tables based on 5 percent sample data, (1983) Series-1, Part-II-Special, Census of India, 1981, Registrar, New Delhi.Google Scholar
Sivaswamy, S. (1991) Demographic and Social Dimensions of Child Labour, Sage Publications Ltd, London.Google Scholar
Smith, D.A., Borocz, J. (1995) A New World Order, Greenwood Publishing Group, United States of America.Google Scholar
Suvarchala, G. (1992) ‘Legislation to combat child labour: An international perspective’, Industrial Relations Journal: The European Journal of Analysis, Policy and Practice, 23(2): 144154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
The Illustrated Weekly, (1986) Bombay, India, June: 335.Google Scholar
The Lawyers (1988) India, August: 1220.Google Scholar
Weiner, M. (1991) The Child And The State In India, Princeton University Press, New Jersey.CrossRefGoogle Scholar