ILO Convention No. 182
Worst Forms of Child Labour
Convention, 1999
The General Conference of
the International Labour
Organization,
Having been convened at
Geneva by the Governing Body
of the International Labour
Office, and having met in
its 87th Session on 1 June
1999, and
Considering the need to
adopt new instruments for
the prohibition and
elimination of the worst
forms of child labour, as
the main priority for
national and international
action, including
international cooperation
and assistance, to
complement the Convention
and the Recommendation
concerning Minimum Age for
Admission to Employment,
1973, which remain
fundamental instruments on
child labour, and
Considering that the
effective elimination of the
worst forms of child labour
requires immediate and
comprehensive action, taking
into account the importance
of free basic education and
the need to remove the
children concerned from all
such work and to provide for
their rehabilitation and
social integration while
addressing the needs of
their families, and
Recalling the resolution
concerning the elimination
of child labour adopted by
the International
Labour Conference at its
83rd Session in 1996, and
Recognizing that child
labour is to a great extent
caused by poverty and that
the long-term solution lies
in sustained economic growth
leading to social progress,
in particular poverty
alleviation and universal
education, and
Recalling the Convention on
the Rights of the Child
adopted by the United
Nations General Assembly on
20 November 1989, and
Recalling the ILO
Declaration on Fundamental
Principles and Rights at
Work and its Follow-up,
adopted by the International
Labour Conference at its
86th Session in 1998, and
Recalling that some of the
worst forms of child labour
are covered by other
international instruments,
in particular the Forced
Labour Convention, 1930, and
the United Nations
Supplementary Convention on
the Abolition of Slavery,
the Slave Trade, and
Institutions and Practices
Similar to Slavery, 1956,
and
Having decided upon the
adoption of certain
proposals with regard to
child labour, which is the
fourth item on the agenda of
the session, and
Having determined that these
proposals shall take the
form of an international
Convention; adopts this
seventeenth day of June of
the year one thousand nine
hundred and ninety-nine the
following Convention, which
may be cited as the Worst
Forms of Child Labour
Convention, 1999.
IN FREEDOM
Article 1
1. Each Member
which ratifies this
Convention shall take
immediate and effective
measures to secure the
prohibition and elimination
of the worst forms of child
labour as a matter of
urgency.
Article 2
2. For the
purposes of this Convention,
the term child shall apply
to all persons under the age
of 18.
Article 3
3. For the
purposes of this Convention,
the term the worst forms of
child labour comprises:
(a) all forms of
slavery or practices
similar to slavery, such
as the sale and
trafficking of children,
debt bondage and serfdom
and forced or compulsory
labour, including forced
or compulsory
recruitment of children
for use in armed
conflict;
(b) the use,
procuring or offering of
a child for
prostitution, for the
production of
pornography or for
pornographic
performances;
(c) the use,
procuring or offering of
a child for illicit
activities, in
particular for the
production and
trafficking of drugs as
defined in the relevant
international treaties;
(d) work which, by
its nature or the
circumstances in which
it is carried out, is
likely to harm the
health, safety or morals
of children.
Article 4
4. (1) The types
of work referred to under
Article 3(d) shall be
determined by national laws
or regulations or by the
competent authority, after
consultation with the
organizations of employers
and workers concerned,
taking into consideration
relevant international
standards, in particular
Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the
Worst Forms of Child Labour
Recommendation, 1999.
4. (2) The competent
authority, after
consultation with the
organizations of employers
and workers concerned, shall
identify where the types of
work so determined exist.
4. (3) The list of
the types of work determined
under paragraph 1 of this
Article shall be
periodically examined and
revised as necessary, in
consultation with the
organizations of employers
and workers concerned.
Article 5
5. Each Member
shall, after consultation
with employers' and workers'
organizations, establish or
designate appropriate
mechanisms to monitor the
implementation of the
provisions giving effect to
this Convention.
Article 6
6. (1) Each
Member shall design and
implement programmes of
action to eliminate as a
priority the worst forms of
child labour.
6. (2) Such
programmes of action shall
be designed and implemented
in consultation with
relevant government
institutions and employers'
and workers' organizations,
taking into consideration
the views of other concerned
groups as appropriate.
Article 7
7. (1) Each
Member shall take all
necessary measures to ensure
the effective implementation
and enforcement of the
provisions giving effect to
this Convention including
the provision and
application of penal
sanctions or, as
appropriate, other
sanctions.
7. (2) Each Member
shall, taking into account
the importance of education
in eliminating child labour,
take effective and
time-bound measures to:
(a) prevent the
engagement of children
in the worst forms of
child labour;
(b) provide the
necessary and
appropriate direct
assistance for the
removal of children from
the worst forms of child
labour and for their
rehabilitation and
social integration;
(c) ensure access to
free basic education,
and, wherever possible
and appropriate,
vocational training, for
all children removed
from the worst forms of
child labour;
(d) identify and
reach out to children at
special risk; and
(e) take account of
the special situation of
girls.
7.
(3) Each Member shall
designate the competent
authority responsible for
the implementation of the
provisions giving effect to
this Convention.
Article 8
8. Members shall
take appropriate steps to
assist one another in giving
effect to the provisions of
this Convention through
enhanced international
cooperation and/or
assistance including support
for social and economic
development, poverty
eradication programmes and
universal education. |