4.1 Article

Forgotten children: a socio-technical systems analysis of the 2004 and 2015 forced child labour reports from Indian cottonseed farms

Journal

TRENDS IN ORGANIZED CRIME
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 203-234

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12117-021-09426-x

Keywords

Child labour; Organised Crime; Sociotechnical Systems; Policy implications; Asia; India

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Using a systems analysis approach, this study analyses forced child labour incidents in Indian cottonseed farms and explores the role of human factors in illegal child labour in the Indian agri-food sector. It reviews national policies on labour welfare and rights through case studies and highlights the evolution of organized crime in India with regards to the reliance on forced child labour.
Using a systems analysis approach, the authors analyse forced child labour incidents in Indian cottonseed farms in the years 2003/04 and 2014/15, and explore the role played by human factors in contributing to the illegal use of child labour in the Indian agri-food sector. National policies on labour welfare and rights are reviewed through the case studies used as a lens to explore wider issues associated with forced child labour in supply chains. The study highlights the evolution of organised crime in India with regards to the reliance on forced child labour, using the four conceptual dimensions of modern slavery established by the UK Home Office in 2017. The study does identify limitations and flaws associated with designing policies based on a work-as-imagined philosophy and demonstrates how the use of maturity modelling can explore how exploitation, corruption and organised crime is framed and can become more formalised over time.

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