Invisible work: Child work in households with a person living with HIV/AIDS in Central Uganda.

IF 0.9 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Sahara J-Journal of Social Aspects of Hiv-Aids Pub Date : 2017-12-01 DOI:10.1080/17290376.2017.1379429
Julie Abimanyi-Ochom, Brett Inder, Bruce Hollingsworth, Paula Lorgelly
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Background: HIV/AIDS has led to increased mortality and morbidity, negatively impacting adult labour especially in HIV/AIDS burdened Sub-Saharan Africa. There has been some exploration of the effects of HIV/AIDS on paid child labour, but little empirical work on children's non-paid child work. This paper provides quantitative evidence of how child and household-level factors affect children's involvement in both domestic and family farm work for households with a person living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) compared to non-PLWHA households using the 2010/2011 Centre for Health Economics Uganda HIV questionnaire Survey.

Method: Descriptive analysis and multivariate logistic modelling is used to explore child and household-level factors that affect children's work participation.

Results: This research reveals greater demands on the labour of children in PLWHA households in terms of family farm work especially for boys. Results highlight the expected gendered social responsibilities within the household space, with girls and boys engaged more in domestic and family farm work, respectively. Girls shared a greater proportion of household financial burden by working more hours in paid work outside the household than boys. Lastly, the study revealed that a household head's occupation increases children's participation in farm work but had a partial compensatory effect on their involvement in domestic work. Wealth and socio-economic standing is no guarantee to reducing child work.

Conclusion: Children from PLWHA households are more vulnerable to child work in family farm work especially boys; and girls are burdened beyond the household space through paid work. Differing perspectives and solutions need to consider the contextual nature of child work.

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隐形工作:在乌干达中部,儿童在有艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者的家庭中工作。
背景:艾滋病毒/艾滋病导致死亡率和发病率增加,对成人劳动产生负面影响,特别是在艾滋病毒/艾滋病负担严重的撒哈拉以南非洲。关于艾滋病毒/艾滋病对有偿童工的影响已经有了一些探索,但关于儿童的非有偿童工工作的实证研究很少。本文利用2010/2011年乌干达卫生经济中心艾滋病毒问卷调查,提供了儿童和家庭层面因素如何影响有艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者(PLWHA)家庭与非PLWHA家庭的儿童参与家务和家庭农场工作的定量证据。方法:采用描述性分析和多元logistic模型,探讨影响儿童劳动参与的儿童和家庭层面因素。结果:本研究表明,在家庭农场工作方面,对艾滋病家庭儿童的劳动需求更大,尤其是男孩。结果突出了家庭空间中预期的性别社会责任,女孩和男孩分别更多地从事家务和家庭农场工作。女孩在家庭以外从事有偿工作的时间比男孩长,分担了更大比例的家庭经济负担。最后,研究表明,户主的职业增加了儿童参与农活,但对他们参与家务劳动有部分补偿作用。财富和社会经济地位并不能保证减少童工现象。结论:来自艾滋病家庭的儿童更容易从事家庭农活,尤其是男孩;此外,女孩还因从事有偿工作而承受着家庭以外的负担。不同的观点和解决方案需要考虑儿童工作的背景性质。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
40 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal publishes contributions in English and French from all fields of social aspects of HIV/AIDS (care, support, behaviour change, behavioural surveillance, counselling, impact, mitigation, stigma, discrimination, prevention, treatment, adherence, culture, faith-based approaches, evidence-based intervention, health communication, structural and environmental intervention, financing, policy, media, etc).
期刊最新文献
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