Slum Children Are Engaged in Several Works
Slum Children Are Engaged in Several Works
Slum Children Are Engaged in Several Works
ARE ENGAGED IN
SEVERAL WORKS
(CHILD LABOUR)
BELOW THE AGE OF
14
(Lost Spring)
Project By:
1. Vaidik Khatri
2. Anuj Sinha
Acknowledgement
I would like to extend my sincere and heartfelt obligation
towards all those who have helped me in making this
project. Without their active guidance, help, cooperation
and encouragement, I would not have been able to present
the project on time. I am extremely thankful and pay my
sincere gratitude to my
teacher____________________________ for her valuable
guidance and support for completion of this project. I also
acknowledge with a deep sense of reverence, my gratitude
towards my parents, other faculty members of the school
and friends for their valuable suggestions given to me in
completing the project.
Date:
Place:
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that the project work on
____________________ based on the curriculum of
CBSE has been completed by
_______________________________________________
of Class-XII Section ______ of KENDRIYA VIDYALAYA
ORDNANCE FACTORY KATNI. The above mentioned
project work has been completed under my guidance
during the academic year 2021-22
INDEX
1. Introduction
2. Slums in Chennai
3. Their Livelihood
4. Role of Constitution
5. Education in Slums
6. Role of NGO’s
7. Conclusion
Introduction
Child labour refers to the exploitation of children through any
form of work that deprives children of their childhood, interferes with
their ability to attend regular school, and is mentally, physically,
socially and morally harmful. Such exploitation is prohibited by
legislation worldwide, although these laws do not consider all work by
children as child labour; exceptions include work by child artists,
family duties, supervised training, and some forms of work
undertaken by Amish children, as well as by indigenous children in
the Americas.
Child labour has existed to varying extents throughout history.
During the 19th and early 20th centuries, many children aged 5–14
from poorer families worked in Western nations and their colonies
alike. These children mainly worked in agriculture, home-based
assembly operations, factories, mining, and services such as news
boys – some worked night shifts lasting 12 hours. With the rise of
household income, availability of schools and passage of child labour
laws, the incidence rates of child labour fell.
In the world's poorest countries, around one in four children are
engaged in child labour, the highest number of whom (29 percent)
live in sub-saharan Africa. In 2017, four African nations (Mali, Benin,
Chad and Guinea-Bissau) witnessed over 50 percent of children
aged 5–14 working. Worldwide agriculture is the largest employer of
child labour. The vast majority of child labour is found in rural settings
and informal urban economies; children are predominantly employed
by their parents, rather than factories. Poverty and lack of schools
are considered the primary cause of child labour.
Their Livelihood
Children growing up in slums experience a childhood that often
defies the imagination of both the ‘innocent childhood’ proponents
and the ‘universal childhood’ advocates. The slums typically lack
proper sanitation, safe drinking water, or systematic garbage
collection; there is usually a severe shortage of space inside the
houses where the children live, and no public spaces dedicated to
their use. But that does not mean that these children have no
childhood, only a different kind of childhood that sees them playing
on rough, uneven ground, taking on multiple roles in everyday life,
and sharing responsibilities with adults in domestic and public spaces
in the community.
Children were to be seen everywhere as one entered the Slums.
They played in the parks. They played on the rough ground and
vacant lots dotted with graves, in the open spaces in the centre
where garbage was manually sorted. The parked rickshaws, vending
carts, cars and bikes all served as play props in the streets. As soon
as they could walk, children could be seen outdoors walking around
mostly barefoot, climbing on debris and petting goats that freely
roamed around. Girls as young as 5 carried infants and toddlers on
their hip and moved around freely in the narrow pedestrian by lanes
of the village, visiting shops for sweets and the houses of friends
down the street. Many houses open out directly onto the street
through a doorway that often is nothing more than a 5-foot-high
opening in a wall. Infants reach out of these holes in the wall and
interact with passers-by.
Children use the public realm of neighbourhoods not only for
playing but for many other activities including privacy needs and
concealing secrets. This requires a range of spaces of different
scales and character. Well-designed parks are no doubt very
desirable for slum kids, but throughout the day more play happens in
the streets and informal open spaces of the neighbourhood than in
formal parks. Children referred to the importance of having friendly
adults around their play territories, which tells us we need to create
new, more imaginative solutions for children’s play than resource-
intensive parks which inevitably become sites of conflict between
different user groups.
Children from both communities routinely sought out open
spaces in the local area outside their neighbourhoods. This points to
the importance of integrating slums with the wider local area and
securing access to open-space resources for slum children outside of
the slum. The importance of community-level open spaces for
children living in slums cannot be overemphasised. As there is little
opportunity for innovation within the 12.5 m2of cramped private
domestic space that Delhi slum dwellers are typically allocated,
children in slums, including very small children, spend a large portion
of their day outdoors. The cleanliness, safety and friendliness of the
outdoor spaces in a slum thus play an important role in the health
and well-being of children. Slum improvement plans will work better
for children if we consider environmental improvements to the slum
neighbourhood as a whole by involving children and by considering
slums to be an integral part of the city.
Role of Constitution
As compared to other countries, child labour in India is more
prevalent. Out of 179 million children, 90 million who are in the age
group of 6 to 14 years are employed and they don’t go to school. It
contributes to 50% of children in our country who are involved in child
labour. Since 1933, various laws have been made in India to control
child labour. These laws include:
Education in Slums
According to the Census 2011, there are 13.7 million slum
households across 63% of India’s towns. The residents of
these households include migrants, half of them being among
the poorest of the poor. More than eight million children under
6 years live in approximately 49,000 slums. There are 22.72
million children (age group 5-18) living in urban slums who are
out of school.*
The migrant population in India is mostly illiterate and
constantly on the move, in search of new livelihood
opportunities. Migrant children move with their parents and
often lose out on age-appropriate educational opportunities.
Often they engage in labour to escape poverty and support
their parents.
Access to early childhood care, balanced nutrition,
education, health, and recreational facilities are keys to the
positive development of children. However, in places where
clean drinking water and two square meals are a struggle, slum
children’s education, health and other contributing factors for
development will always take a backseat.
The Right to Education Act 2009 was expected to bring a
huge surge of enrolment in urban and rural schools. However,
after more than a decade there are millions of children who are
out of school in India, most live in urban slums and remote
rural areas. A higher proportion of girl children (3.23%) are out
of school than boys (2.77%). Girls in slums and rural areas are
out of school as they are engaged in domestic work or do not
go to school to take care of the younger siblings. Boys drop out
of school to supplement household incomes. Lack of
healthcare facilities, absence of toilets in schools, and lack of
proper nutrition also lead to an increase in drop-out rates.
Role of NGO’s
This is one of the best NGOs which gives support to children by
the following schemes.
a) Project Dayitva: Under this scheme, Tarang
provides education to children who became dropouts. This
organization arranges night schools for those children and at the
same time this organization gives food facility to the children. Before
starting food facility, attendance percentage is low. But, tied up with
other NGO, Tarang provided food facility to children. So, attendance
percentage was increased by 50%.
b) Project Lakshya: Under this scheme, Tarang would like to
give coaching in mathematics, English and computer skills to children
who live in slum area. These classes are taken on weekends. In a
week, on every saturday and sunday, these classes are taken by
professionals in respective subjects. With free of cost, this facility is
provided to children who live in slum areas.
c) Project Shiksha: This project is related to children who
became orphans. For those orphans, this project is established for
the construction of innovative school to accomodate nearly 250 to
300 children. In view of slum children particularly who became
orphans, for them this project is intended.
d) Project Aadhaar: This project is for the poor children to give
empowerment to their skills. In view of this notion, Tarang asks the
people who have interest to donate something to this children. This is
the part of this project. Those people who donate to this project, they
have the right to inspect the children any time.
2. Pratham: This is one of the NGOs which provides education
to underprivileged children. To provide such facility to slum
children in Mumbai, this NGO was established in 1994. The following
programmes are conducted by Pratham to give education to children.