Menu

News & Events

19 Sep 2017
ILO highlights the importance of birth registration for social protection
TAGS

On 19 September 2017 in New York, the International Labour Organization launched two seminal reports: Global Estimates for Child Labour: Results and Trends, 2012 – 2016 and Global Estimates of Modern Slavery: Forced Labour and Forced Marriage. Following the multi-year, collaborative research project conducted with Alliance 8.7 Members, the Walk Free Foundation and the International Organization for Migration, the reports reveal what the ILO deems the “true scale of modern slavery around the world”. Notably, the Child Labour report highlights the importance of birth registration, specifically as it pertains to building a policy response to child labour for the road forward. 

First, the report emphasizes that, “Free and compulsory education of good quality up to the minimum age for admission to employment is a key tool in ending child labour”, but also notes that the cost to the family is one of the primary barriers preventing educational access for children. In response, the report stresses the need for investment in child education and singles out the link between cash transfers, non-means-tested benefits, and birth registration as a viable method for offsetting “the indirect cost of children’s time in school”.  

Second, the report acknowledges poverty, risks, and shocks to the family as the primary drivers behind child labour and says that “social security is critical to mitigating these vulnerabilities”.  After emphasizing public employment programmes, health protections, unemployment protections, and basic income security as the basis for a well-designed social security system, the report ultimately concludes that “Birth registration, itself a key human right, is an essential starting point for ensuring coverage in all of these areas”. 

More News

01 October 2019

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight October 2019) The University of Melbourne, as part of the Bloomberg…

01 October 2019

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight October 2019) During the 74th Session of the UN General Assembly,…

01 October 2019

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight October 2019) North and Central Asian countries are moving quickly to…

22 July 2019

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight July 2019) A delegation of 8 officials from Bangladesh Bureau of…

01 October 2019

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight October 2019) There is no region of the world unaffected by…

31 May 2019

Through resolution 73/1, ESCAP member States decided that in the years when the High-level…

31 May 2019

Tongans will soon benefit from improved digital access to key public services, including…

30 April 2019

The Technical Support Unit-CRVS, Ministry of Planning, Development and Reform (M/o PDR) has been…

30 April 2019

CRVSNOW, the first commercially available cloud-based Civil Registration and Vital Statistics…

27 March 2019

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), with…