Model of Vulnerability to Child Labor applied in Chile
12 de June de 2020
It allows identifying the territories most vulnerable to child labor in Chile and defining in which regions and communes the most relevant preventive efforts and multisectoral actions should be concentrated. From the results obtained by the Child Labor Vulnerability Index, it was identified that of the 345 communes in the country, 81 have a high index, 63 a medium index and 201 a low index.
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Child Labor Risk Identification Model applied in Guatemala
12 de June de 2020
Developed by the ILO and ECLAC, in collaboration with the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare within the framework of the Regional Initiative for Latin America and the Caribbean Free of Child Labor. It allows identifying the risk of child labor at the local level. Through the implementation of the Model, it has been identified that, of the 340 municipalities in the country, the risk of child labor is high in 98 municipalities, medium in 132 municipalities and low in 110 municipalities. Complete information at the national, regional and departmental levels is available in the following files.
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The COVID-19 pandemic could increase child labor in Latin America and the Caribbean, Technical Note No. 1
11 de June de 2020
Joint analysis produced by the ILO and ECLAC on the possible impacts that the crisis generated by COVID-19 could have on children and adolescents. The analysis, which initially covered three countries (Mexico, Peru and Costa Rica), based on the results of the Child Labor Risk Identification Model (MIRTI), allows estimating that child labor could increase between 1 and 3 percentage points in Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Don't leave girls behind. Child labor and gender in Latin America and the Caribbean
25 de March de 2020
It analyzes how gender roles, still in force, largely determine the different characteristics and conditions that child labor acquires for girls and boys, and points out the information gaps to be filled in to prevent the exploitation of girls from remaining invisible, since In some cases, not even close people or people from the community itself recognize that girls are in a situation of child labor. This is so because they frequently perform domestic work for third parties, work in family businesses located in private homes or intensive domestic tasks in the home itself, which involve a series of different risks.
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Territorializing the response to child labor: systematization of Phase II of the Child Labor Risk Identification Model (MIRTI)
02 de March de 2020
Result of the implementation of a local proposal to accelerate the reduction of child and adolescent labor in the municipality of Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, Mexico; first municipality in the country and in all of Latin America and the Caribbean to implement Phase II of the Child Labor Risk Identification Model (MIRTI). It offers a systematization of the stages of Phase II and the lessons learned in each of them.
The MIRTI is a tool promoted by the Regional Initiative - with the support of the ILO and ECLAC - to accelerate the achievement of Target 8.7 in the countries of the region.
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Model of Vulnerability to Child Labor applied in Costa Rica
23 de January de 2020
This document provides the main results obtained in Costa Rica through the application of the Model of Vulnerability to Child Labor, a tool promoted by the Regional Initiative -with the support of the International Labor Organization (ILO) and the Economic Commission for America Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) - to accelerate the achievement of Target 8.7 in the countries of the region.
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Main milestones in the fight against child labor
21 de January de 2020
Infographic with the main events in the fight against child labor at the global and regional level.
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Memory - V Face-to-Face Meeting of Focal Points of the Regional Initiative Latin America and the Caribbean Free of Child Labour
17 de December de 2019
Held from October 22 to 25, 2019 in Lima, Peru. This meeting managed to be a space for dialogue and exchange of experiences of the Network of Focal Points and specialists, specifically of the progress made in the implementation of Phase I and II of the Child Labor Risk Identification Model (MIRTI). In addition, it was possible to collect inputs associated with the results of the strategic planning 2020-2021, challenges and actions to strengthen the local response and ideas for the regional campaign for the International Year for the Elimination of Child Labor (2021).
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Child and Adolescent Labor Risk Identification Model applied in Argentina
26 de November de 2019
Developed by the ILO and ECLAC, in collaboration with the Ministry of Production and Labor of the Nation (MPT) within the framework of the Regional Initiative for Latin America and the Caribbean free of Child Labor. It makes it possible to identify the risk of child and adolescent labor at the local level. The results for the 511 departments of the country show an average risk at the departmental level of 6.54%. There are 51 departments with high risk, greater than 8.8%.
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Child Labor Risk Identification Model applied in Colombia
26 de November de 2019
Statistical tool prepared by the ILO and ECLAC, applied in Colombia by the National Planning Department (DNP). It makes it possible to identify: i) the departments and municipalities, and even individuals, with greater risks of incurring in child labor and ii) the factors that most affect this risk, in order to define which multisectoral actions are most relevant to interrupt the trajectory towards child labor. From the results obtained by the model, it was identified that of the 1,046 municipalities in the country, 188 present high risk, 456 medium risk and 402 low risk.
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