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Child labor

Child labor

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Summary

Child labor means work that deprives children of their childhood, education, or harms their health and development. Not all work kids do is “child labor” - helping with light chores after school is normal. The problem is exploitative or hazardous work.

In Ghana’s context:
Where it shows up most: Cocoa farms in Western North & Ashanti, fishing on Lake Volta, gold mining “galamsey” sites, and street hawking in Accra/Kumasi.
Main drivers: Poverty, lack of schools nearby, cultural norms around children contributing to family income, and demand for cheap labor.
Laws: Ghana’s Children’s Act 1998 sets the minimum work age at 15, and 13 for “light work”. Hazardous work is banned under 18. Ghana has also ratified ILO Conventions 138 and 182.

What’s being done:
Government: Free SHS policy helps keep kids in school longer. The National Plan of Action Phase II targets ending worst forms of child labor.
Industry: Cocoa firms like COCOBOD + Nestlé, Mars, etc. run Child Labor Monitoring Systems to track and remediate cases.
NGOs: Challenging Heights rescues kids from Lake Volta trafficking. UNICEF supports community sensitization.

The tension: For many families, a child’s income is survival money. So banning it outright without alternatives can backfire. The most effective programs combine school access, livelihood support for parents, and enforcement.

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