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DOI: 10.1177/026272800702800103
Recognising Complexity, Embracing DiversityWorking Children in BangladeshMostafa Haider studied law at the University of Chittagong and is enrolled as an Advocate in the Dhaka Bar, Bangladesh. He has recently completed his LLM at SOAS, University of London. His research interests include the broader area of law, poverty and development. Address: c/o 46A Upton Lane, Forest Gate, London E7 9LN. [e-mail: mhaider2{at}gmail.com] The diversity of children's work and life across the world has generated intense debates on the socio-legal status of working children, particularly in countries of the South. Official legal systems often accord little recognition to working children, while in practice they encompass a distinct yet complex entity. This article examines the tensions between official international and national laws and the actual reality or living laws regarding working children in Bangladesh in a wider interdisciplinary context. While these children are mainly so impoverished that they have to work for their own survival, to deny them any agency in negotiating their position seems misguided. Thus it is argued that the present dominant understanding of child work is not compatible with the real life situations of such children and is, in fact, injurious to their individual interests. The article suggests that a culture-specific analysis which properly diagnoses the contextual struggles of working children in countries like Bangladesh is better suited to minimising the ongoing suffering of working children.
Key Words: Bangladesh child work child labour development labour laws living law, NGOs poverty social work
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