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elligant35

Human Rights Watch: Child Labor - 0 views

shared by elligant35 on 28 May 07 - Cached
    • elligant35
       
      Addresses all aspects of child labor globally and locally. Links child labor to HIV/AIDS, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Education, Terrorism and more. Focuses on all third World countries along with the United States. Gives the labor force of children in all these areas.
Kendall

Child Labour Inquiry - 0 views

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    I know that before this class whenever I thought of child labor the only thing that came to mind was India, and sweat shops!  I like many others never took into consideration any other kind of labor.  So felt compeeled to do a little bit of reading on child labor in India, so that I could personally relate it to other places in the world!
elligant35

UNICEF - Child protection from violence, exploitation and abuse - Child labour - 0 views

    • elligant35
       
      UNICEF reports at least 218 million children between the age of 5-17 are being used as child laborers. They break child labor into child marriage, child trafficking, genital mutilation, discrimination, and other important areas of abuse. These child labors usually stem from impovershed communities or countries.
Kendall

Nike Accused of "Slave" Child Labor - 0 views

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    This is a perfect example of how child labor has become a global problem of itself.
Kendall

Child labor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    this is a very broad definition of child labor.
jcoop11

Wallerstein on World Systems - 0 views

  • makes possible analytically sound comparisons between different parts of the world.
    • Mike Wesch
       
      This is why Wallerstein's theory gained acceptance in the anthropological community. We are interested in making sound cross-cultural comparisons.
    • jcoop11
       
      I may be reading to much into the wording, but do we really want to "compare" cultures. When we talk about comparing cultures, it seems as if we are holding them to a certain standard.
    • Mike Wesch
       
      We are not comparing them to a standard - just trying to see the range of human possibilities - and how humans are interrelated.
  • feudalism
    • Mike Wesch
       
      Three primary elements characterized feudalism: lords, vassals and fiefs; the structure of feudalism can be seen in how these three elements fit together. A lord was a noble who owned land, a vassal was a person who was granted possession of the land by the lord, and the land was known as a fief. In exchange for the fief, the vassal would provide military service to the lord. The obligations and relations between lord, vassal and fief form the basis of feudalism. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudal_system
  • switch from feudal obligations to money rents
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • These impoverished peasants often moved to the cities, providing cheap labor essential for the growth in urban manufacturing
  • Eastern Europe (especially Poland) and Latin America, exhibited characteristics of peripheral regions.
  • In Latin America, the Spanish and Portuguese conquests destroyed indigenous authority structures and replaced them with weak bureaucracies under the control of these European states.
    • Mike Wesch
       
      This is the most common pattern found in the world simulation, though other forms emerge as well.
  • served as buffers between the core and the peripheries
  • According to Wallerstein, the semi-peripheries were exploited by the core but, as in the case of the American empires of Spain and Portugal, often were exploiters of peripheries themselves. Spain, for example, imported silver and gold from its American colonies, obtained largely through coercive labor practices, but most of this specie went to paying for manufactured goods from core countries such as England and France rather than encouraging the formation of a domestic manufacturing sector.
    • Mike Wesch
       
      nice summary here of the relationship of core, semi-periphery, and periphery
  • Similarly, Protestants, who were often the merchants in Catholic countries, found they were targets of the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church, a trans-national institution, found the development of capitalism and the strengthening of the state threatening.
  • During this period, workers in Europe experienced a dramatic fall in wages.
    • Mike Wesch
       
      This is interesting. We often think of this transition as benefitting the people of the Core - but it did not necessarily benefit everybody.
  • This powerful merchant class provided the capital necessary for the industrialization of European core states.
    • elligant35
       
      Is the merchant class the first indication of a middle class? If so, then why the fall in wages becasue it seems to me that all they created was a middle man to continously take the wages from the working class that supported the goods that were traded?
  • European states participated in active exploration for the exploitation of new markets.
  • With the independence of the Latin American countries, these areas as well as previously isolated zones in the interior of the American continent entered as peripheral zones in the world economy. Asia and Africa entered the system in the nineteenth century as peripheral zones.
    • Mike Wesch
       
      Expansion of the periphery - this typically represents Round 2 of the World Simulation.
  • the core enriched itself at the expense of the peripheral economies. This, of course, did not mean either that everybody in the periphery became poorer or that all citizens of the core regions became wealthier as a result.
  • Wallerstein asserts that an analysis of the history of the capitalist world system shows that it has brought about a skewed development in which economic and social disparities between sections of the world economy have increased rather than provided prosperity for all.
  • This was the first time that an economic system encompassed much of the world with links that superseded national or other political boundaries
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    Read all of this page & make notes so we can share ideas!
Kendall

YouTube - Child weavers / labour and the poverty - 0 views

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    This is the image of poverty and child labor most commonly thought of.
mesims

untitled - 0 views

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    I really agree with the website's definition of child labor.  This is what I personally believe child labor is!  There are some many additives today that make the simple definition so needlessly complicated!

Kendall

North American Secretariat on Child Labor and Education - ICCLE - 0 views

shared by Kendall on 28 May 07 - Cached
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    This website is awesome, check it out, and look around to find all sorts of nifty research on children worldwide!
Kendall

Child Labor - 0 views

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    We have come a long way in the past 100 years.  But I still don't feel it is good enough, children today have to work to keep their families alive, and they give up their education to do so.
Kendall

Child Abuse: Types, Signs, Symptoms, Causes and Help - 0 views

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    This website gives well rounded definitions of many different forms of child abuse, including the statement that "illegal" child labor is a form of child abuse.
Kendall

Child abuse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Child Labor is a form of child abuse, it can cause physical and/or mental harm to the child!
Kendall

Expanded Academic ASAP Document - 0 views

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    This article is basically just one of the ways The United States of America is trying to end the labor of child prostitution.
Kendall

Expanded Academic ASAP Document - 0 views

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    Children are more susceptible to injury or death on the job than adults. (which is the same in physical abuse.)
Kendall

Expanded Academic ASAP Document - 0 views

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    This article highlights the concerns people have for the environment and type of work that young citizens do.
kgarland

Child labour rooted in Africa's poverty - 0 views

shared by kgarland on 29 May 07 - Cached
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    Child labor / Poverty
mesims

YouTube Childlabor - 0 views

shared by mesims on 28 May 07 - Cached
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    A very powerful video about child labor.
Kendall

Workplace Prof Blog: Child Labor Laws and High School Drop Out Rates - 0 views

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    Honestly, I really just liked this blog, it's a neat one!
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