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Anthropologist calls for a greater appreciation of child labor

(LINKS UPDATED 7.3.2023) There are many campaigns against child labour. But anthropologist Thomas Offit also views child labour as a chance for children to improve and take control of their lives. In an interview with The Lariat Online (Baylor University) he criticizes ethnocentric views of childhood.

“When we in the West view child labor, we view them as victims of exploitation instead of having some control over their lives,” Offit said. Many children are victims of child labor. But these children are also active agents in making their own and family’s lives better by working.

Offit has researched on child street labor, including in Guatemala City working with Mayan Indians in the textile trade. Child street labor is also the basis for his new book coming out within the year.

Guatemala doesn’t have a social welfare system and the economic opportunity is limited. In his view, a greater appreciation of child labor and the “greater economic forces that bring children to work on the streets in the first place”, is important. Our lives and theirs are closely related.

>> read the whole story in The Lariat Online

Similar views on child labor can be found in an article by Olga Nieuwenhuys in the Annual Review of Anthropology 1996 called The Paradox of Child Labor and Anthropology. In her view, one should rather focus on the economic conditions that create child labor. In her review, she is also criticizing notions of childhood that may make sense in rich countries, but not in poor ones:

Illuminating the complexity of the work patterns of children in developing countries, recent anthropological research has begun to demonstrate the need to critically examine the relation between the condemnation of child labor on the one hand and children’s everyday work practice on the other.

The emerging paradox is that the moral condemnation of child labor assumes that children’s place in modern society must perforce be one of dependency and passivity. This denial of their capacity to legitimately act upon their environment by undertaking valuable work makes children altogether dependent upon entitlements guaranteed by the state. Yet we must question the state’s role—as the evidence on growing child poverty caused by cuts in social spending has illuminated—in carrying out its mission.

(…)

As a global solution to eliminate child labor, development experts are now proposing a standard based on the sanctity of the nuclear family on the one hand and the school on the other as the only legitimate spaces for growing up. If this becomes a universal standard, there is a danger of negating the worth of often precious mechanisms for survival, and penalizing or even criminalizing the ways the poor bring up their children. This criminalization is made more malevolent as modern economies increasingly display their unwillingness to protect poor children from the adverse effects of neoliberal trade policies.

(…)

The price of maintaining this order (of childhood institutions like school) is high, because it requires, among other commitments, money to support the institutions at the basis of the childhood ideal, such as free education, cheap housing, free health care, sport and recreation facilities, family welfare and support services, etc. Developing economies will unlikely be able to generate in the near future the social surplus that the maintenance of these institutions requires. As the neoliberal critique of the welfare state gains popularity, wealthy economies also become reluctant to continue shouldering childhood institutions.

Rethinking the paradoxical relation between neoliberal and global childhood ideology is one of the most promising areas for research, she writes:

Research should especially seek to uncover how the need of poor children to realize self-esteem through paid work impinges upon the moral condemnation of child labor as one of the fundamental principles of modernity. (…) The ways children devise to create and negotiate the value of their work and how they invade structures of constraint based on seniority are other promising areas of future anthropological research.

This type of research is even more relevant in that it may not only enrich our knowledge of children’s agency but may prove seminal in understanding the process by which work acquires its meaning and is transformed into value.

Current child labor policies reinforce acccording to Olga Nieuwenhuys paradoxically children’s vulnerability to exploitation:

Irrespective of what children do and what they think of what they do, modern society sets children apart ideologically as a category of people excluded from the production of value. The dissociation of childhood from the performance of valued work is considered a yardstick of modernity, and a high incidence of child labor is considered a sign of underdevelopment. The problem with defining children’s roles in this way, however, is that it denies their agency in the creation and negotiation of value.

The whole paper is not accessible for people outside the academe (university account needed).

Available for everybody: The report by Norwegian anthropologist Tone Sommerfelt: Domestic Child Labour in Morocco. An analysis of the parties involved in relationships to “Petites Bonnes” (pdf). “Petites bonnes” (small maids) are young girls (here defined as under the age of 15 years) who perform various household tasks, and who live with their employers.

SEE ALSO:

“We want children to be their own ethnographers”

Ethnographic study: Why the education system fails white working-class children

(LINKS UPDATED 7.3.2023) There are many campaigns against child labour. But anthropologist Thomas Offit also views child labour as a chance for children to improve and take control of their lives. In an interview with The Lariat Online (Baylor University)…

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Anthropologist examines influence of robots in Japan

At home, robots are about to replace the role of the grandmother and in the industrial sector, robots are more popular than foreign laborers according to anthropologist Jennifer Robertson. Robertson is researching on the effects of robots on Japanese society.

At a seminar, Robertson spoke on the decreasing human birthrate and increasing humanoid robot population in Japan, the university newspaper The Daily Texan informs.

In the industrial sector, Japan prefers robots over foreign laborers “because machines do not enhance racial tensions by evoking wartime memories, as foreigners do”, Robertson said (!)

But the country is according to the anthropologist more concerned with utilizing robots to help increase native births:

Because children require care at home, they can keep women from holding jobs. But in today’s society, many women need or want to hold professional positions. As mothers join the workforce, robots take over their household duties, thus increasing the workforce and the birthrate. (…) Robertson showed photos of cartoon-like machines with exaggerated features and colorful bodies. These were the robots such as Wakamaru, PaPeRo and Ri-man that babysit, tutor children and care for the elderly.
(…)
These robots transmit images to cell phones, thus allowing mothers to keep an eye on their children while away from the home. (…) Japanese children are obedient to their robotic caretakers, and the machines have replaced the role of the mother or grandmother in the home.

>> read the whole story in The Daily Texan

“Robots are expected to be in the 21st century what automobiles were in the 20th century,” Jenny Robertson said in an earlier article in The Michigan Daily. For more information on robots in Japan, see also two BBC-stories Japan’s rise of the robots and Japanese scientists have unveiled the most human-looking robot yet – a “female” android

SEE ALSO:

Why cellular life in Japan is so different – Interview with anthropologist Mizuko Ito

Pop goes Japanese culture: Japan’s most visible export isn’t economic, but cultural

The cultural nationalism of citizenship in Japan and other places

At home, robots are about to replace the role of the grandmother and in the industrial sector, robots are more popular than foreign laborers according to anthropologist Jennifer Robertson. Robertson is researching on the effects of robots on Japanese society.…

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Ab Sommersemester 2008: Masterstudiengang in Medizinethnologie in Heidelberg

Health and Society in South Asia heisst ein neuer viersemestriger Masterstudiengang an der Uni Heidelberg, der sich mit Medizinethnologie in Kombination mit Südasienstudien beschäftigt:

Wie gehen die Menschen Südasiens (Indien, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka) mit Gesundheit und Krankheit um? Auf welche Theorien gründen sich die indigenen Medizinsysteme Südasiens wie zum Beispiel Ayurveda, Siddha, Yoga oder Unani und wie werden sie praktiziert? Was sind heutzutage die wichtigsten und dringlichsten Gesundheitsprobleme in Südasien und wie reagieren die unterschiedlichen Gesundheitssysteme, die schulmedizinischen und die indigenen, darauf? Welchen Einfluss haben die Umweltveränderungen auf die medizinische Situation in Südasien? Solche und ähnlichen Fragen sollen in dem neuen Master of Health and Society in South Asia interdisziplinär untersucht werden.

Der Studiengang richtet sich u.a. an Studierende, die vorhaben, im Bereich der medizinischen Entwicklungshilfe zu arbeiten oder dort bereit Berufserfahrung gesammelt haben. Die Unterichtssprache ist Englisch. Man moechte auch südasiatische Studierende und andere internationale Studierende für diesen Studiengang gewinnen.

Um zugelassen zu werden ist jedoch ein mit “überdurchschnittlichem Erfolg erworbener Studienabschluss” in Ethnologie oder anderen relevanten Faechern erforderlich.

Anmeldeschluss ist der 15. Januar 2008.

>> Webseite des Studiengangs mit mehr Informationen

SIEHE AUCH:

Erfolgreiche Zusammenarbeit zwischen “traditionellen” und “westlichen” Heilern

Journal Ethnologie 2/2007 ueber Medizinethnologie

Interview mit Verena Keck: “Ethnologen notwendig in der AIDS-Bekaempfung”

Bald kann man Ethnologie auch in Luzern studieren

Health and Society in South Asia heisst ein neuer viersemestriger Masterstudiengang an der Uni Heidelberg, der sich mit Medizinethnologie in Kombination mit Südasienstudien beschäftigt:

Wie gehen die Menschen Südasiens (Indien, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka) mit Gesundheit und Krankheit um? Auf…

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12 new interviews about cosmopolitanism, islam, modernity, street culture…

In case you’re wondering why this blog sometimes has not been updated for several days: One reason might be my job as a webjournalist for the research program Cultural Complexity in the New Norway (CULCOM).

Now, several of my interviews and summaries have been translated into English:

– Modernity means acceleration
Why do we all have so little time, even though we can actually work more effectively than we could previously? The reason is that acceleration- the continuous increase in speed- is the basic principle of our time. “Modernity’s entire history can be written as a history of acceleration,” says Hartmut Rosa. At the CULCOM seminar “Time and Modernity” the sociologist presented a new theory of modernity.

– This is the basis for a global ethic
They do not know one another and cannot speak to each other. Nevertheless, the old woman in the Moroccan village offers to help the dying woman from the United States. “In order to find common human values, we must go to the basic conditions for our existence – love and mortality”, said the philosopher Odin Lysaker, at the seminar “Shared values in a community with a multiplicity of values”.

Learning from People’s Struggle for Recognition
“The youth attack because society has violated them, and therefore they fight for ‘recognition’,” wrote the philosopher Odin Lysaker in a feature article on the youth protests in Copenhagen. Is it possible for us to understand conflicts better by reflecting over the fact that all people seek recognition?

Invisible Norwegianness
What representations of “Norwegianess” and “normality” are imparted when teachers teach about gender and sexuality in a multicultural classroom? While most studies about “the New Norway” focuses on minorities, Åse Røthing directs her focus at both the majority and the minority, the “Norwegian” and the “non-Norwegian.”

Exclusion Instead of Help
German politicians claim that they want to “save immigrant women.” But for researcher Urmila Goel, the bills proposing to combat arranged marriage are racist and exclusionary. In a new research project, Goel is going to look at how racist and heteronormative discourses work together and reinforce each other in the German debate on arranged marriage.

Moving toward a Cultureless Islam
An extravagant Pakistani wedding or a moderate Muslim celebration? What is Muslim and what is Pakistani? – It wasn’t long before I began to understand that that which permeates all of their discussions about identity is the search for an Islamic identity. They are very concerned with separating culture and religion, says Liv Bjørnhaug Johansen, who recently submitted her Master’s thesis on identity-work on a Norwegian-Pakistani webpage”)

Getting under the surface of the Koran school movement
Both researchers and Turkish authorities view them as fundamentalists. But actually they engage in totally normal religious activities. “It is important to render innocuous that which is harmless”, says the anthropologist Johannes Elgvin, who in his Master’s thesis takes issue with previous research on the Koran school movement.

Religion – an anchoring point for the nation?
Why are there so many debates on religion these days? – Religion is presented as making up part of an alleged core of both the self and the nation, says Lars Laird Eriksen. The sociologist is researching the role of religion in the construction of national identity in the Norwegian school.

Is Networking More Important than Education?
Immigrant women do not leave the workforce at a higher rate than Norwegian women when they have children. The younger generation is doing better than their parents” generation. But education is not as important for obtaining a permanent job as is commonly believed. In her Master”s thesis, sociologist Ida Drange gives us new insight into immigrant women on the job market.

We are all multicultural
Why do intelligent people have prejudices against lesbians and people from distant regions? Where does tolerance end for other ways of living?- I am interested in the boundaries of multiculturalism, said anthropologist Aleksandar Boskovic at one of CULCOM’s Monday seminars.

– More of a Street Culture than an Honor-based Culture
The African male youth along the Aker river in Oslo who sell hashish to researchers, designers and students are passing on an old tradition in the area. “To speak of an honor and feudal culture in connection with the violence along the river is misguided,” says sociologist Sveinung Sandberg. Together with sociology professor Willy Pedersen, this research fellow has studied Norway’s largest outdoor hash market.

From an ethnic to a civic identity?
In 1990, Lithuania was the first Baltic State to declare its independence from the Soviet Union. The Lithuanian anthropologist Vytis Ciubrinskas spoke at CULCOM’s Monday Seminar of a country where national identity has become less ethnic.

In case you're wondering why this blog sometimes has not been updated for several days: One reason might be my job as a webjournalist for the research program Cultural Complexity in the New Norway (CULCOM).

Now, several of my interviews and…

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Lorenz her som driver nettstedet. Siden jeg ikke kjenner alle dere kan dere sende en epost til meg http://www.antropologi.info/contact.php for å kunne skrive innlegg i php-bloggen? Det må gjøres manuelt.

Funker alt som det skal? Noe som mangler? Si fra om dere trenger en kalender, en wiki etc. Det kan forresten være en ide å opprette kategorier (f.eks “Arrangementer”) slik at det blir lettere å finne fram etterhvert.

Lorenz her som driver nettstedet. Siden jeg ikke kjenner alle dere kan dere sende en epost til meg http://www.antropologi.info/contact.php for å kunne skrive innlegg i php-bloggen? Det må gjøres manuelt.

Funker alt som det skal? Noe som mangler? Si fra…

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