Children at the heart of their communities.
What the recent trip to Côte d’Ivoire highlighted to me, with even greater clarity, is that despite our best intentions, we cannot tackle child labor through focusing on child labor alone. Child labor does not exist in a vacuum. It occurs through the interaction of complex conditions and factors over time, of which I have only been able to get but a glimpse. Responding to child labor in cocoa, as if it is unconnected or unrelated to anything else will only result in undermining those very efforts. If it takes a village to raise a child, then we must step back and see children at the heart of their families and communities.
To take a child-centered approach, we need to look at this issue from the perspective of the child. Would it make a difference to a child whether he is working in a cocoa farm or a cotton plantation? Is it of more or less concern to us whether a child is selling fruit on the street or whether she is watering cocoa trees? In order to put children at the heart of our efforts against child labor in cocoa, we must be directed by a focus on the holistic well-being of the child. Every child has the right to grow up in an environment safe from harm, and with access to care and education. Aiming for anything less will not eradicate child labor.
If child labor, in its different forms, is so prevalent in the cocoa sector, it is indicative of a broader and endemic problem. Indeed, Côte d’Ivoire’s children do not only need protection from exploitative work in cocoa, but also from exploitation in other sectors and from other forms of abuse and violence (as in every other country). Children also need a nurturing environment in which to grow, with access to education, health care, clean water and sanitation. Their parents and communities need access to adequate livelihoods, security, social equality and political stability.
This is why responding to child labor in Côte d’Ivoire, cannot simply be about raising awareness of communities and taking a compliance-driven approach. Stakeholders working against child labor need to meet communities halfway, by talking and listening to them as partners, and by supporting their genuine desire to improve the well-being of their children. We also all need to work closely with government and other actors to support the development of infrastructure. This is not only about enabling better access to schools, but also better access to child protection systems, which provide children with social services, support and care and access to justice for the harm they may suffer. In fact, all stakeholders need to be partners in development.
This is why responding to child labor in Côte d’Ivoire, cannot simply be about raising awareness of communities and taking a compliance-driven approach. Stakeholders working against child labor need to meet communities halfway, by talking and listening to them as partners, and by supporting their genuine desire to improve the well-being of their children. We also all need to work closely with government and other actors to support the development of infrastructure. This is not only about enabling better access to schools, but also better access to child protection systems, which provide children with social services, support and care and access to justice for the harm they may suffer. In fact, all stakeholders need to be partners in development.