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General Evaluation of Child Labour Studies in Turkey By Prof. Dr. A. Gurhan Fisek In Turkey, scientific studies on child labour problem have first started to sprout after 1979, "Child Labour Year". In the light of the data presented by these studies, idea production and awareness raising efforts on child labour issues have gradually intensified. Child labour related activeness has come on the scene only after the area of activity has been recognised and defined. Considering the press releases on child labour, we come across first with the newspaper articles. Especially after 1987, after the Apprenticeship, Foremanship and Mastery Law was approved, the law and its applications have become a subject-matter of the articles published at Turkish newspapers, aiming at awareness rising on that matter. Newspaper articles have been followed by the articles published in various periodicals which have clarified the matter in depth and have presented various findings acquired from the researches carried on that matter. Especially in the first years of 1980' and 90', child labour studies have led the problem to be defined thoroughly. After 1992, books and the multiplication of studies have become widespread. For this wide-spreading, IPEC (the International Program on the Elimination of Child Labour) project developed by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) has played a major role. As the relevant publications are examined, it can be noticed that both the publishing organisations and the relevant studies published are generally taken place under the scope of this program. For today, it can be observed that several public, professional and non-governmental organisations having a considerable weight in social life have been in close co-operation and in reciprocal communication through a Consultative Committee in order to eliminate child labour. Since the last ten years, the number of studies carried out by these organisations are more that the ones of the previous 65 years. The last ten years’ agenda has been shaped by the objectives and solutions on working children that were determined in the "1990' Child Politics National Congress". 1990' CHILD POLITICS NATIONAL CONGRESS The period during which preparatory studies were made through the front-meetings realised between March 23-24 1989 with a great participation, and which was for ascertaining the situation and problems of child workers together with ascertaining the necessary solutions for them has been finalised with "1990" Child Politics National Congress" (May 26-27, 1989 Ankara). These studies have become widespread together with the ratification of the Child Rights Declaration in Turkey, and it has been endeavoured to have relevant applications influenced accordingly. 1990' Child Politics National Congress Report classifies the school-age children in Turkey as follows:
Child labourers constitute the first two entries of this classification; and they may also be sorted out under these three sub-groups:
These designations have been put forth for consideration through ten-year-old accumulation of knowledge and experience of the experts participated in the meeting; and have appeared as novel classifications for Turkey. Similarly, considering these days, there has been another new and significant ascertaining: "Unless radical transformations take place in the economic, social and cultural spheres, child labour reality cannot be eliminated. In that context, all insisting pressures make child workers to be in more vulnerable position. Therefore, necessary precautions that are to be benefited from in the "short-run" should be preferred." This noteworthy ascertaining has been also fairly distinctive in regard to the ILO/IPEC program to be directed, the program practice of which has been decided to put in 1992. When this program has been first brought up, it has had a radical standpoint against child labour as it can be clearly deducible from the name of the program. Especially Turkey and the other five participant countries of this program (Brazil, India, Indonesia, Kenya and Thailand) have set forth that this objective can only be achieved in the long-run and child labour reality could not be eliminated "by force" unless the existing social, economic and cultural conditions change. Then, this claim has been appropriated; and for today, one can observe a two-phased strategy appropriated. For the first one, "short-term" program objectives are under consideration; and by these, facilitating the lives of child workers have been aspired. Among these, melioration of working environments, provision of necessary health services and improvement of leisure time facilities and educational opportunities can be enumerated. The second phase, on the other hand, is the primary objective: withdrawing children from working life. However, this can only be achieved through the accompaniment of essential social policies and through dealing with poverty, unemployment and social insecurity in the "long-run". Raising public awareness, bringing up the matter for consideration with all its dimensions and stressing the desperation of children are the first steps to attain this objective. Short-term program objectives, additionally, ensure that children are introduced with their rights and contemporary living opportunities that the human rights documents provide for themselves. In order to provide the necessary solutions, the report classifies the studies that are to be carried out as follows:
(Inten years time after the report, there has been observed aconsiderable progress except for the "e" clause)
(Inten years time after the report, intense efforts have been put in
order to realise "c" and "e" clauses, and
model studies have been developed accordingly.)
(In ten years time after the report, intense
efforts have been put on allthe issues except for the "d" and "f"
clauses)
(Inten years time after the report, this
matter has become a currentissue due to the fact it has become serious as the
migrations havebecome intense. In order to overcome this problem, serious
effortsand model studies have been put for consideration.)
The
importance of this study lies in the fact that it appears as a
significant document identifying the applications taken place in ten
years time after the report. As it is mentioned above with short
notes, almost all the proposals have been taken into consideration;
for some of them, pilot projects and "model" studies have
been carried out; and the possibilities of realising them have been
tested. The ones that have not been reached to that stage so far, on
the other hand, have been taken on the agenda gradually.
On that
ground, although children have not been provided with the
"opportunity to be able to enjoy their childhood", it
does not appear as a sole dream anymore that they would overcome this
period with a minimum loss.
As the
action programs on child labour in Turkey are analysed, four groups
of studies call our attention:
Followed
by the endeavour of human beings to earn a living, the exercise of
teaching and transferring the work to son and daughter had been
transformed into a work taught to an apprentice by a master; and this
system, as much as we know, was organised under the frame of "Ahi"
corporations.
Untilthe 19th century, Ahi system and
following gedik(fixed capital) practices were persistently influential in
thesocio-economic life of the Ottoman Empire. Yet, it gradually
diminished as the capitalism spread over the world and as the system
became incompatible with the capitalist enterprises. Finally, the
"system" was totally banned in 1908. However, abolishment
of the guild system in the Ottoman context did not hamper the
apprentice-foreman-master relations and the vocational training
manners related to these; and these relations have been carried up
to now by being adapted to new emerging conditions.
Bilateral Education & Apprenticeship
Education:
Adopted in 1926, the Turkish Code of Obligations has
made the signing of the "apprenticeship contract"
possible; yet it has not proposed any regulation for the agenda in
regard to apprentice-foreman-master relations. Until the Code of
Apprenticeship, Foremanship and Mastery (Law No. 2089) was approved
in 1997, no regulation whatsoever has been actualised in spite of the
related efforts. The experiences acquired after 1997 allowed the
Apprenticeship and Vocational Training Code (Law No. 3308) to be
approved and its being put into practice at the national scale.
Nowadays, through the applications directed by the Ministry of
Education-General Directorate of Informal Education, apprentices are
ensured to continue their theoretical-practical education at the
Apprenticeship Education Centres to which children below the age of
18 can be registered while utilising from the social insurance
opportunities.
Bilateral Education – MEKSA
Projects:
They are such educational studies that are based upon
workplace-school integration and that are carried out at these two
separate educational environments. For this reason, both
schools-teachers and workplaces-masters-occupational organisations
(as workplace representatives) are held responsible for these studies
to be carried out. MEKSA projects, in that context, are carried out
by the active participation of the artisan associations, unions and
federations and of related confederations. They have been fulfilling
their works through the education centres established in various
regions of Turkey.
Studies of the Turkish Development
Foundation (TDF):
TDF
executes several social development studies in various rural regions,
especially in Duragan. It aims to reduce the requisites of whole
family members considering the fact that the following situations
occur due to rural poverty and incapacity: child trafficking;
children' leaving their homeland due economic difficulties;
and their being employed in heavy works. With such enterprises, TDF
seems to have passed the test in regard to its notifying the society
on seasonal trafficking of child workers and its efforts on
diminishing the problem.
Fisek Model:
This
study aims to improve child labour employing working environments and
to ensure that child workers utilise from the "occupational
health and safety" services, especially from the preventive
medicine services, including the "social" dimension of
such provision. This model is carried out by Fisek Institute, the
preparatory studies of which started in 1982 and which organises
small-scale enterprises around shared health-safety units. The model
is composed of mobile clinics (mobile unit) visiting these
enterprises regularly; school health units formed at the
Apprenticeship Education Centres; and "health centres"
founded at the small-scale industrial regions in which all these
studies are carried out. These studies were supported under the scope
of ILO/IPEC project in 1992, and this led all these efforts to
progress forward. Today, the institute has proven itself to be
self-sustaining and self-financing; and continues to provide these
services at five centres in Istanbul, Ankara and Denizli.
Foremost,
this model intends to put social precautions into practice targeting
firstly occupational health and safety precautions and child worker
employing small-scale enterprises. It has been the initiator of
various "firsts" in Turkey, while it bears these
"firsts"and "originalities" at the world scale as well.
Amongthese, we can mention the services embracing more 500 small-scale
enterprises, its intermingling the aspects of medicine, engineering
and social sciences; its combining the gender studies with the ones
targeting girl child apprentices, and its modular structure
consisting of several centres uniting around a same focus. Compatible
with the community medicine approach, this model has achieved its
sustenance through the regular contributions of small-scale
enterprises.
Turk-Is (The Confederation of Turkish Trade Union Workers and
Employers) Model:
Five-year-old studies of Turk-Is Child Labour Office are
the reflections of an evident program and approach that are to be
observed with great interest not only in Turkey, but also in various
other countries (especially the developing countries). Turk-Is
maintains the idea that the solution of the child labour problem and
the protection of child rights lie in the active efforts of trade
unions. Accordingly, it rejects such an unionism the responsibilities
of which are only limited with the trade union members. Under the
scope of this understanding, it has been intensifying its studies
since 1993 with a persistent effort on the melioration of the working
conditions of child workers; directing these children to attend
schools; and elimination of child labour. Accordingly, its efforts
can be elaborated as follows:
IDDG (Workplace Inspection Consultancy Group)
Practice:
Utilising from the opportunities of the "Bylaw on
Practical Education Providing Workplaces and their Inspection"
published at the Official Gazette (dated Jan. 5, 1992), "Workplace
Inspection and Constultancy Groups" have been established under
the scope of "Tradesmen and Artisans Association".
Regarding this study executed by TESK, IDDG takes place at the base
(bottom) of an organisational structure operating in the form of
association-union-federation-confederation relations as the closest
unit to members and workplaces. In this study, the problems are aimed
to be resolved mildly and flexibly by means of inspections combined
with consultancy services, rather than through the means of penalty.
All these studies can be enumerated as the convenience of
instructors; the convenience of workplaces; compatibility of
education with the program; compatibility of employment with
contracts and laws.
The Centre of Working Children in Ankara
Streets:
Thestudies started with an agreement made between the
GreaterMunicipality of Ankara and ILO/IPEC aim to concentrate on the
following objectives: solving the problems of street children in
regard to their families; overcoming the problems they face at
schools if they are attending schools; ensuring their rehabilitation;
orienting them towards a safer future; hence, prevention of their
abuse and neglect. For this reason, 1200 square meter field taking
place at Sıhhiye (Ankara) Multilevel Parking Garage has been
utilised since July 1, 1993, which was arranged in order to serve 200
children directly. This centre provides nourishment and health care
services, sportive and animation facilities, and educational support
for street children, in addition to the studies on the acquisition of
healthy and lasting jobs. Furthermore, psychological consultation,
treatment and orientation services are provided for the families as
well.
Based upon
a sentence in the Law on Protection of General Health, the minimum
age of child employment was accepted as 12 for a long time. This
minimum age requirement was raised to 15 with an amendment made in
the Labour Law in 1983 (Article No. 67). According to the same
article, it was allowed for children at the age of 13 to engage in
light works that do not jeopardise their attendance to schools,
vocational training or orientation programs, and their competence to
utilise from educational facilities.
However,
the "Apprenticeship Contract", coming on the scene with
the Code of Obligations approved in 1926, became an opportunity for
child workers to be employed as "apprentices". This
implementation was nourished with the enactment of the
"Apprenticeship, Foremanship and Mastery Law" in 1977,
and of "Apprenticeship and Vocational Training Law" in
1986. However, all these caused to a disagreement to occur between
the "labour-related" and "educational" units
of the state.
The
Ministry of Labour and Social Security defines these children as
"worker", since the definition is based upon the fact
that child workers actually engage in the production process 5 days
in a week. However, the Ministry of Education defines them as
"student" with a claim that these children receive
theoretical education once a week at Apprenticeship Education
Centres, and practical education 5 days in a week at the relevant
workplaces. The Apprenticeship and Vocational Training Law, on the
other hand, both defines these children as "student" and
appraises them under the scope of partial insurance.
In Turkey,
social reality proves that children get into the working life at an
early age. No prohibition and obstructing effort whatsoever have
proven this fact to be wrong. Specialists agree upon that eight years
compulsory primary education implementation lessens the number of
full-time working children; but at the same time it is stated that
child labour is to change in form due to the persistent necessities
that force children to get into the working life. The increase in the
number of children working during extra-school hours bears various
disadvantages for working children since they are not to utilise from
the protectiveness of the Labour Law.
The
immediate future will be a scene for the endeavours to prepare a
better future for our children through new researches and action
programs.
What we
wish is that the elimination of child labour, that we estimate its
realisation in the long-run, would be realised "urgently"
by overcoming poverty, unemployment and social insecurity as well.
Fisek Institute Science and Action Foundation for Child Labour |