Festivals & Events
World Day Against Child Labour 2022: Theme, History, and Significance of the Anti-Child Labour Day
World Day Against Child Labour, otherwise called Anti-Child Labour Day, is seen on June 12 consistently to highlight the effect of the emergency on child labor. Child labour is a global challenge as it chooses the eventual fate of the nation. According to the census of India, in 2011, there are 1.01 crore child labourers in the nation.
As indicated by the United Nations, around 218 million youths work all over the world, large numbers of them full-time. They don’t go to school and have little or no free time. Many individuals are malnourished and neglected. They are denied the amazing chance to grow up. The greater part of them is exposed to the most obvious sorts of child labour, like unsafe work, slavery, or different types of constrained work, illegal activities, for example, drug trafficking and prostitution, and commitment to armed combat.
World Day Against Child Labour History
The year 1998 was a defining moment in the battle against youngster work. This year, the International Labour Organization (ILO) established another international rule (ILO Convention No. 182) to shield youngsters from the most horrendously terrible sorts of child labour.
The understanding was quick to be all around confirmed by all ILO part countries, as well as the ILO’s fastest endorsed show. Around the same time, an idea was made to designate a solitary day every year as a day against child labour.
At long last, in 2002, the International Labour Organization assigned June 12 as World Day Against Child Labour.
World Day Against Child Labour 2022 Theme
The theme of World Day Against Child Labour 2022 is ‘Universal Social Protection to End Child Labour’. On this day, ILO calls for expanded interest in social protection systems and schemes to lay out strong social protection floors and safeguard youngsters from child labour.
The 2022 World Day Against Child Labour will in no time occur after the fifth Global Conference on Child Labour.
World Day Against Child Labour Significance
Poverty is one of the main reasons for child labour since young people are compelled to exit school and work in low-wage jobs to assist their parents to sustain their families. Also, some are constrained into child labour by organized crime rackets.
Youngsters across the globe are participating in paid and neglected types of work that are not unsafe to them every day. In any case, they are named child labour since they are either too youthful to even think about working or are engaged in perilous exercises which might risk their physical, mental, social, or educational growth.
In all created countries, somewhat more than one out of each and every four youngsters (ages 5 to 17) is working in conditions that are unsafe for their health and development.
Africa ranks the most elevated among regions both in the percentage of youngsters in child labour, one-fifth, and irrefutably the number of youngsters in child labour, 72 million. Asia and the Pacific rank second most noteworthy in both these measures. Seven percent of all kids and 62 million in outright terms are in child labour around here.
-
Entertainment4 weeks agoFull List of Performers and Presenters for the 2026 American Music Awards
-
Sports1 week agoSouth Korea vs Czechia, 2026 FIFA World Cup – Preview, Prediction, Head to Head, Predicted Lineups, Team Squads and More
-
Fashion4 weeks agoSelf-Funded and Scaling: Inside the Rise of Fleur Couture
-
Sports3 weeks ago2026 College Station Regional: Bracket, Schedule, and How to Watch
-
Business3 weeks agoAmwhiz Launches All-in-One Shopify Solutions for Ecommerce Businesses Across India
-
Tech4 weeks agoSpotify Launches AI-Powered Audiobook Publishing Tool With ElevenLabs Integration
-
Entertainment4 weeks agoNFMG PRODUCTION Unveils Mr & Miss India International Star 2026 (Season 3) Show with Akanksha Choudhary & Many More Celebrities
-
Sports1 week agoMexico vs South Africa, 2026 FIFA World Cup – Preview, Prediction, Head to Head, Predicted Lineups, Team Squads and More

