Small children are often forced to work as laborers due to a combination of factors, including poverty, lack of access to education, and familial economic pressures. In many cases, families rely on the income generated by their children to survive, leading to their exploitation in hazardous and low-paying jobs. Additionally, some regions may lack enforcement of child labor laws, allowing such practices to persist. Ultimately, systemic issues like inequality and inadequate social support contribute to the continued existence of child labor.
Being a child soldier is not a good thing. They are basically in an army. They are forced to work, and forced to hold a gun to shoot. If they or their family are poor, the child has no choice, they have to be a child solider.
Yes, "labourer" is a common noun. It refers to a person who performs manual work, such as construction, cleaning, or farming.
possibly
No
Children are forced to work in underground sweatshops in the basements of Chinese restaurants. They are then forced to mass produce wontons for the working public.
Yes. He used to work as a shepherd and as a contract labourer in his early days. later, he went on trading tour to syria. So his condition was a sort of mix. something you can expect from an orphan of an affluent family
When she was 12, she was captured and taken to the Hidasta tribe and was forced to work. She was a Shoshone Indian previously.
No. But they may be fined, denied childcare, or not promoted at work etc etc.
a labourer needs more energy because an office worker sits down all day looking at a screen whilst a labourer does work and sweats
they will take a small amount from your benefit
Yes, at age 16 he was abducted from Britain and forced into slavery in Ireland where he worked as a shepherd.
Abraham Lincoln thought the difference was only that wage labor was temporary and slavery was permanent.