CHILD LABOUR Prepared by: Nimrah Saleem M.Sc. D.J (A) 2012-2014 Roll # 45 Institute of Communication Studies Punjab University‚ Lahore Content 1: Introduction 2: Strategies/Plans 3: What can you Do? 4: Target Audience 5: Communication Mode 6: Conclusion 7: Bibliography Introduction Definition of child labour The Article 1 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child defines a child as anyone below the age of 18.“Child labour” is
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Give Labour Day back to the workers Robert Fulford‚ Financial Post Published: Friday‚ August 29‚ 2008 Most job-holding Canadians do not belong to unions and express absolutely no wish to join. That ’s the most striking and (in numerical terms) the most convincing conclusion that emerges from the Nanos Research national survey of 1‚000 employees. Behind that single fact we can glimpse a major change in Canadian society‚ the slow but apparently inevitable death of a once-vibrant force in national
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COST CONCEPTS AND COST ACCOUNTING By: Aman Jawahar Sarika Deepak Muneer CONTENTS Concept of Cost Cost Accounting Terms in Cost Accounting Elements of Cost Meaning of Overheads Classification of Costs Methods of Costing Types of Costing MEANING: Cost Concept: The term ‘cost’ means the amount of expenses [actual or notional] incurred on or attributable to specified thing or activity. Cost means ‘the price paid for something’. Cost Accounting: Cost Accounting is concerned with recording
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Division of labour Today Today‚ the world we live in‚ is progressing so rapidly. Be it‚ the increasing number of mega cities‚ the tremendous advances in medicine‚ the huge number of products that we depend on everyday‚ the wonders of internet‚ the satellites and the space ships‚ nothing has been the same with the never-ending human desire for better life. If we wonder how it was all possible? Well‚ the answer that Adam Smith gives is ’Division of Labour ’. Today‚ even simplest form of labour like‚
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CAUSES OF CHILD LABOUR • Poverty • Parental illiteracy • Tradition of making children learn the family skills • Absence of universal compulsory Primary education • Social apathy and tolerance of child labour • Ignorance of the parents about the adverse consequences of Child labour • Ineffective enforcement of the legal provisions pertaining to child labour • Non-availability of and non-accessibility to schools • Irrelevant and non-attractive school curriculum • Employers prefer children as they constitute
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Child labour Introduction Throughout the world‚ especially in the less-developed countries‚ an immeasurable amount of children have been involved in what has been called child labour‚ and its prevalence has now sparked much worry. Child labour can be defined as any work that is harmful to a child’s health or interrupt a child’s education (International Labour Organisation‚ 2012). According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO)‚ there were approximately 153 million child labourers aged
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CHILD L ABOUR IN INDIA Economics of Child Labour A case study of the glass bangle industry BACKGROUND Child Labour The glass manufacturing industry in Ferozabad‚ Uttar Pradesh‚ produces bangles‚ utensils‚ bulbs‚ decorative articles etc. The glass industry has been classified as hazardous and the employment of child labour (children below age 14 years) in it is prohibited. However‚ available research and literature indicated that child labour was concentrated mainly in the production
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Strategic Cost Management ACCT90009 Seminar 1 Seminar 1 Subject Administration Introduction to SCM oduc o o SC Administration • Subject Coordinator Dr. David Huelsbeck Email: david.huelsbeck@unimelb.edu.au Room: 08.028‚ The Spot Phone: +61 3 9035 6256 Consultation Hours: Monday 4:15pm – 6:15pm • Seminars: Tuesday: 2.15 pm – 5.15 pm‚ FBE ‐ Theatre 211 (Theatre 2) Thursday: 6.15 pm – 9.15 pm‚ Alan Gilbert ‐ Theatre 2 Teaching Format and Resources • Seminar Format 3 hour seminar
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Organizational Legitimacy under Conditions of Complexity: The Case of the Multinational Enterprise Author(s): Tatiana Kostova and Srilata Zaheer Reviewed work(s): Source: The Academy of Management Review‚ Vol. 24‚ No. 1 (Jan.‚ 1999)‚ pp. 64-81 Published by: Academy of Management Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/259037 . Accessed: 07/05/2012 03:36 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms
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2. How might having a child with a disability affect the family? The birth of a baby is generally anticipated with great vigor and expectations of a prosperous future. This excitement may disappear with the birth of a disabled babies. It does not matter if the handicap is blindness‚ retardation or a physical abnormity. The family into which this child is born will transform in some ways.(Özşenol 2003) This paper will focus on the effect a handicapped child may have on his family. A specific disability
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