SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE IN STRENGTHENING HOUSEHOLD ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT AND SUPPORT: BUILDING SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS FOR WORKING CHILDREN’S PARENTS

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25128/2520-6230.20.1.4.

Keywords:

Child labour, households’ economic empowerment, poverty, socio-economic development, social work, sustainable livelihoods

Abstract

Child labour studies worldwide have acknowledged the need to explore how empowering parents could strengthen household means of support. Hence, it is crucial to investigate the ideas that builds sustainable livelihoods of families to recovered child labourers in Nigeria, given the influence on children’s education, human relations, social and holistic development. This study is qualitative and examines the feedback obtained from social workers on social intervention measures that could strengthen household economic development with a view to addressing the problem of child labour. Using the thematic data analysis, the social workers interviewed put forward various elements of a holistic strategy for improving parents or guardians economic status as well as remediating children involved in child labour, which included; schooling assistance and socio-economic development. Hence, recommendations are made that policies and programmes need to be focused on developing and strengthening household economic sustainability. Social workers as service providers should ensure that support measures are significant to responding to clients’ needs.

Author Biography

Tracy BE Omorogiuwa, University of Benin

Senior Lecturer Department of Social Work

References

Abebe, T. & Bessel, S. (2011). Dominant discourses, debates and silences on child labour in Africa and Asia. Third World Quarterly, 32(4), 765-786.

Betcherman, G., Fares, J., Luinstra, A. & Prouty, R. (2004). Child labour, education, and children’s rights. Washington DC: The World Bank. (Social protection discussion paper series (No. 0412).

Braun, V. & Clarke, V. (2006).Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology, 3(2), 77-101.

Covarrubias, K., Davis, B. & Winters, P. (2012). From protection to production: Productive impacts of the Malawi social cash transfer scheme. Journal of Development Effectiveness, 4(1), 50-77.

De Hoop, J. & Rosati, F. C. (2014). Cash transfer, child labour. The World Bank Research Observer, 29(2),202-234.

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) (2010). Child labour prevention in agriculture junior farmer field and life school: Facilitator’s guide. Rome: FAO.

International Labour Organization (ILO) (2016). The ILO in Nigeria. Geneva: ILO

Iravani, M. R. (2011). Role of social workers in supporting girl child labour and their families. International Journal of Business and Social Science, 2(18), 119-125.

Jones, N., Presler-Marshall, E., Cooke, N. & Akinrimisi, B. (2012). Promoting synergies between child protection and social protection in Nigeria. London: Overseas Development Institute (ODI).

Koch, T. (2006). Establishing rigour in qualitative research: The decision trail. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 53(1), 91-103.

Omorogiuwa, T.B.E. (2015). The triple burden of child labourers: Impacts on education. Nigerian Journal of Social Work Education, 14, 21-29.

Omorogiuwa, T.B.E. (2016). The socio-economic context of child labour in Benin City, Nigeria. Ilorin Journal of Sociology. 8(1), 64-72.

Omorogiuwa, T.B.E. (2017). Childhood experiences: An afro-centric perspectives on child labour. Journal of Nursing, Social Studies, Public Health and Rehabilitation. 1–2, 55-62.

Omorogiuwa, T.B.E. (2018). The health and psychosocial hazards of child labour. Implications for social work intervention. Benin Journal of Social Sciences, 24(1), 75-90.

Osiruemu, E. (2007). Poverty of parents and child labour in Benin City, Nigeria: A preliminary account of its nature and implications. Journal of Social Sciences, 14(2), 115-121.

Rosati, F. & Lyon, S. (2006). Tackling child labour: Policy options for achieving sustainable reductions in children at work. Rome: Understanding Children’s Work.

Togunde, D. & Carter, A. (2006). Socio-economic causes of child labour in urban Nigeria. Journal of Children and Poverty, 12(1), 73-89.

Padgett, D. (2008). Qualitative methods in social work research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Sim, A. (2009). Confronting child labour in Afghanistan. Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit briefing paper series. Afghanistan: AREU.

Shenton, K. A. (2004). Strategies for ensuring trust worthiness in qualitative research projects. Education for Information, 22, 63-75.

Downloads

Published

2020-04-22

How to Cite

Omorogiuwa, T. B. (2020). SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE IN STRENGTHENING HOUSEHOLD ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT AND SUPPORT: BUILDING SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS FOR WORKING CHILDREN’S PARENTS. Social Work and Education, 7(1), 53–64. https://doi.org/10.25128/2520-6230.20.1.4.

Issue

Section

RECENT ISSUES IN SOCIAL WORK