1 Universidad del Rosario, Bogota, Distrito Capital, Colombia.
2 World Justice Project, Washington, District of Columbia, USA.
Int J Health Serv. 2018 Jul;48(3):535-548. doi: 10.1177/0020731417747421. Epub 2018 Jan 16.
This article has 3 main objectives: (1) to assess the prevalence of child labor in Colombia, (2) to identify factors associated with child labor, and (3) to determine whether social protection programs have an association with the prevalence of child labor in the country. Using a cross-sectional study with data from the Colombian Demographic and Health Survey 2010, a working child was defined as a child who worked during the week prior to the survey in an activity other than household chores. Through descriptive statistics, bivariate analysis, and multivariate regressions, it was found that child labor was associated with gender (boys were more likely to work), older age, ethnicity (children from indigenous communities were more likely to be workers), school dropout, disability (children with disabilities were less likely to be working), subsidized health social security system membership, and lower number of years of mother's schooling. Furthermore, the results of this study suggest that children beneficiaries of the subsidy Familias en Acción were less likely to be working and that social protection programs were more effective to reduce child labor when targeting the lowest wealth quintiles of the Colombian population.
本文有 3 个主要目标:(1)评估哥伦比亚童工的流行率,(2)确定与童工相关的因素,以及(3)确定社会保护计划是否与该国童工的流行率有关。本研究采用了横断面研究设计,使用了 2010 年哥伦比亚人口与健康调查的数据,将从事非家务劳动的周工作儿童定义为童工。通过描述性统计、双变量分析和多变量回归分析,发现童工与性别(男孩更有可能工作)、年龄较大、族裔(来自土著社区的儿童更有可能成为工人)、辍学、残疾(残疾儿童工作的可能性较小)、补贴健康社会保障系统成员资格以及母亲受教育年限较短有关。此外,这项研究的结果表明,Familias en Acción 补贴的儿童受益人的工作可能性较小,并且社会保护计划在针对哥伦比亚人口中最贫困的五分之一时,更有效地减少了童工。