Affiliation:
1. Department of Governance and Development Studies, Bahir Dar University, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia
Abstract
Ethiopia is among the poorest countries of the world in which many children do not have access to a quality education, and many children are engaged in child labour. The study aims to explain the interplay of factors for independent migration and street working experience of children. The article adopted an ethnographic qualitative research method. In-depth interviews, observation, and informal discussions were important tools of data collection. The findings show that independent migration is an important component of working children on streets of Addis Ababa. Children exercise their agency to migrate and engage in a certain kinds of street activities. Most of them migrate from rural areas for non-economic reasons. Street activities are gendered as well as generationally divided. These children have positioned themselves as workers and streets as their workplaces. Despite their agency, they are vulnerable to different structural problems. Hence, blaming child street workers cannot be an effective means of eliminating child labour.
Reference44 articles.
1. An Explication of the Paradox of Street Working Children (SWC) with Special Reference to Pakistan. International Journal of Humanities and;A.Abbasi;Social Science,2013
2. Child labour in the Global South: A review and critical commentary. Barn.;T.Abebe;Nordic Journal of Child Research,2009
3. Dominant Discourses, Debates and Silences on Child Labour in Africa and Asia
4. The economics of child labour: A framework for measurement
5. ‘Generationing’ Development