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Book Reviews
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Children’s Work, Schooling, and
Welfare in Latin America
by David Post
Boulder, CO: Westview
Press,
2001, 304 pages, paperback, US$38,
ISBN: 0-8133-3915-4
Reference citation:
Adams, M. (2002). [Review of the book Children’s Work, Schooling, and Welfare in Latin America by David Post]. In Focus Journal, Vol.1,1. Retrieved Month, day, year, from http://www.escotet.org/infocus/2002/brpost.htm
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The
outlines of the modern consensus on child labor and compulsory
education grew out of the polemic that initiated with the Industrial
Revolution’s stark redefinition of the nature of childhood. In time a
bias in favor of formal education as the preferred occupation of
children came about as the gradual sophistication and diversification
of the economic base took place. Some analysts would contend that this
evolution is a natural progression driven by market forces. They point
to the fact that late industrial and postindustrial economies demand
and offer greater rewards for an educated and more highly skilled
labor pool. Their contention is that market forces have lead nearly
every nation to adopt compulsory attendance laws and restrictions on
child labor as a part of the globalization of the institution of mass
schooling. The continued widespread prevalence of children laboring in
many settings throughout Latin America and the world belies this
apparently facile assumption and gives cause for a review of the forms
of modern child labor and its effect on their participation in the
educational process. This work undertakes that analysis in both a
qualitative and quantitative fashion by reviewing the status of
laboring children in Chile, Peru, and Mexico. The author’s aim in this
work is to highlight the complex array of social and economic forces
that underlie the institutionalization of child labor in these
societies.
The discussion initiates with a review
of the reality of child labor in the context of modern Latin America.
The author reminds us that a “social variant” posits erroneously that
the paradigm established in the developed world concerning child labor
and educational policy, will be in due course replicated in Latin
America. A gradual adoption of more sophisticated technology
throughout the economy should over time drastically reduce the demand
for unskilled labor and eliminate the economic incentive for the
poorer segments of the population to have larger families. Taken
further market forces will engender the willingness by all classes to
invest in the education of a reduced number of offspring. Both David
Post and the proponents of this set of assumptions concur with the
notion that the intrusion represented by this facet of the
globalization process is justified and in the best interest of
society. Yet the author cautions against the inevitability of a
felicitous outcome based solely on the premise that normative and
institutional isomorphism are certainties once polities have adopted
laws concerning compulsory attendance and restrictions on child labor.
A more cautious review of history will show that ordinances banning
child labor were either not passed or rigorously enforced until it had
become clear that it was no longer remunerative to maintain the status
quo.
David Post utilizes the elements of the
paradigm in order to evaluate three national settings to determine if
the criteria that lead to the isomorphic assumptions are arranged in
the requisite order and if not how the model differs. The reader is
then informed that most of the positions that still demand unskilled
labor have not been eliminated, but most often relegated to labor
markets in developing areas such as Latin America where wage
structures provide capital the greatest profit. This tendency was
heightened as a distinct feature of the globalization of the world’s
economy and has accelerated since the 1980’s. At this point the
object ought to be how to go about devising policies most suited to
the cultural nuances, economic structures, and political realities
characteristic of each setting rather than relying on the vagaries of
market forces. In short this is a presentation that eschews dogmatic
presumptions in favor of reasoned analysis building upon previous
findings as a tool for analysis not a schema for prediction.
At several points in the work it is made
abundantly clear that this work is meant to be a part of the
meta-narrative that has lead to the gradual abolition of the worst
excesses of child labor and the concomitant global expansion of
educational opportunities. As the first section unfolds the author
cites the acceptance and codification of child welfare protections
outlined in such documents as the International Labor Organization’s
Convention 182 and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
Children have been significant achievements in this direction. This
along with a presumably unstoppable modernization of the economic base
would suffice (following one prevailing interpretation) to offset the
pressing need of the poor in Latin America to resort to the recourse
of seeking employment for their young in some analyses. This
perspective is flawed Post informs, due in part to its willingness to
ignore the fact that for large segments of the populations in Peru and
Mexico economic modernization has not lead to a generalized
prosperity. There have been instead drastic declines in real income
for many forcing families to rely on the wages of their offspring. The
incapacity or lack of volition on the part of some nations to provide
the poor with access to quality educational opportunities and the
perpetuation of the demand for child labor in spite of legal
prohibitions insures the maintenance of the status quo. Another
primary focus of the narrative is that the execrable quality of the
educational opportunity offered to the poor is often paramount in
influencing parents to make the decision not to sacrifice the child’s
income. The author cautions that to effectively deal with the problem
and prevent it from becoming truly intractable, studies such as this
one must look to determine the true extent and nature of the modern
forms of child labor and their interaction with schooling.
In order to provide a context for this
analysis the narrative undertakes a review of the basic attitudinal
perceptions. Child labor we are reminded has always existed and it is
only in the modern era that civil society has sought to regulate its
terms and conditions. We are reminded that whenever such a revision of
so basic an institution as the family and deeply embedded cultural
norms about childhood takes place it will be met with resistance.
Determining the scope and nature of a given culture’s conservative
opposition to change is a preliminary step for all educational
planners, one that leads to an appreciation that the imposition of
normative assumptions will often lead to novel and unexpected
outcomes. The orientation of policy initiatives must be toward the
inclusion of elements in programs best suited to achieving the desired
goal by incorporating attitudinal elements embedded in the particular
cultural environment.
The presentation proceeds to adequately
outline the parameters of the debate over the basis of civil authority
to regulate the terms of childhood that have served to justify such a
redefinition of childhood to bring it into accord with this
globalization of childhood institutions. Public discourse on these
topics revolves around the rights of the child and the legitimacy of
their curtailment for the sake of the welfare of society. As a civil
liberties issue it may be assumed a child has the right to choose
whether or not to labor or partake of the educational opportunity
provided by society. On this score the author asserts that the
discussion must include a review of the capacity of the child to
appreciate the ramifications of the choice being made. The dominant
view that emerged on education holds that enforcing compulsory
attendance laws, best protects the child’s and collective best
interest. A 1956 UNESCO conference in Lima was the catalyst for
nations in the entire Latin American region to accept the legitimacy
of these basic premises and enact laws to enforce them nearly a half a
century ago to bring their practice in line with what are now
considered global norms. In Post’s view policy initiatives must bring
current practice into compliance with these ordinances.
He continues with this theme by
suggesting that governments are operating within their legitimate
purview by insisting that the advancement of society depends on the
education of the general population. This legitimizes state’s
preemption of parental discretion concerning the option to forego
education and seek employment for the child. The idea that the general
welfare is enhanced to such a significant degree that parent’s and
child’s rights to choose must not be allowed to contravene enjoys
widespread support ranging from the idealistic determinations of the
International Labor Organization to the pragmatic considerations of
the World Bank. Yet predictably in such a scenario not all segments of
society can or wish to accept this determination. Some such as
impoverished parents reject it for pragmatic reasons, others to take
advantage of the opportunity to exploit young workers. As noted these
elements and others have yet to be addressed in their local variants.
Several themes are thus established in
the initial section of the work that will be reiterated throughout.
The first is that merely passing legislation is not of itself
sufficient to elicit the support of parents and others to prevent
child labor for the reasons touched upon here. Globalization schemes
such as this one will quite often engender local resistance leading to
unpredicted outcomes even if not carefully formulated. This is
especially so in the face of declining levels of real income for the
poor within an ever evolving and complex set of socioeconomic
circumstances. A second is that there must be a sustained focus on
improving the quality of the educational programs for the poorest
segments of society if they are ever to be convinced that the
deferment of immediate income is truly in the child’s and the family’s
best interest. The third and perhaps most important is that no one
involved in the policy making process should proceed on a priori
assumptions and should instead attempt to orient their determinations
around a full comprehension of the dynamics found by a close study of
each case.
Next the focus shifts to a review of the
particulars of the forthcoming analysis of Chile, Peru, and Mexico.
This is accomplished through a discussion centered on the prevailing
consensus regarding these topics. The text does not hesitate to focus
attention on the full spectrum of opinions on these topics. Post
acknowledges that perhaps poor parents should not be conceived as
exploiting their young so much as seeking to “insure the survival of
the extended family” an evidence of a deeply ingrained response
mechanism heightened by cultural factors. Nor does he ignore the
representative voices such as that of social activist Rosaura Galeana
who suggests “the experience with work represents an important means
through which children are socializing themselves and preparing
themselves for life”. The reader is clearly aware that it is not the
intention of this text to denigrate beliefs concerning the positive
formative socializing and educative aspects of work or to deny the
capacity for social agency of child workers. It is rather to exhibit
that evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that child labor most often
translates to exploitation and a truncating of human potential. The
author posits that the most common factors behind the persistence of
child labor are the family’s poverty coupled with the incapacity of
financially strapped governments to guarantee equal educational
opportunity for all. The inclusion of these divergent opinions about
varied cultural concepts concerning education and work is to exemplify
how critical it is to ground policy decisions within the context of
place, without forfeiting one’s perspective.
The continuing struggle to form an
international and individual Latin State’s consensus concerning child
labor is outlined as well. This is a preliminary step and
indispensable in order to elicit the political and moral support of
the world community. An insistence on the part of some that the
globalization of cultural norms explicit in these discussions a need
not be universally accepted is an issue not fully resolved to date
even in advanced societies. Post comments on the intransigence of some
nations including the United States to fully accept the conditions of
the declaration of the United Nations Conference on Children’s Rights
as a case in point. A conclusion provided is that even though the
three nations focused on in the work have fully endorsed the most
progressive statements of principle, they all have not as yet fully
adjusted their practice.
A discussion of the multinomial logistic
regression model employed is provided. A handicap was the need to rely
on existing data produced by instruments formulated by the respective
governments to garner general information concerning the economic and
social progression of individual households over a ten-year period. In
no case were these surveys specifically prepared with an eye to
providing data on educational and child labor. Yet by devising a
common set of categories from relevant data included in each, the
researchers were able to isolate factors that had a direct bearing on
the activities, family social status, and cultural attitudes
concerning education and work of the juvenile populations. It was able
to isolate regional variations within specific nations. This allowed
for statistically significant determinations to be drawn in each case
and inter- cultural comparisons to take place. It should be noted that
Chile and Mexico’s findings were found to be better suited for
employment with this model than Peru’s. In all three cases the lack of
funds prevented a more focused study of the specifics of school
attendance and the modes of child labor. As expected the study pointed
to commonalities and divergences in developments between both or all
three countries. The findings produced here are sound and should serve
to guide subsequent investigations and policy directives should
funding become available.
The work notes that Chile’s educational
progress in the last decade parallels its economic success. A unique
element pointed to here was the Chilean system’s adoption in 1980 of a
client-centered model for school choice. Parents were given a subsidy
and the liberty to choose whatever school they deemed best suited for
their child. This experiment with market-oriented variant of public
support was to become the most ambitious experiment to date in
neo-liberal educational policy. After more than a decade in practice
it had failed to significantly dent the performance gap between social
classes and the ever-chronic distinction between underachieving rural
students and their urban counterparts. The author presents an
objective review of the causes for the failure of these initiatives,
which left the not easily accessible rural and marginal students with
limited opportunities. It highlights the fiscal incapacity of Chile or
indeed most nations to provide every segment of society with the full
range of educational options the free market model envisions. This
pinpoints a flaw in the neo-liberal schema commented on by many i.e.,
its arguably excessively idealistic tenets do not translate well as
guides for institutional structures in most settings and its orthodox
ideologues have as yet failed to provide adequate responses when
confronted with this reality. More specific to the Chilean situation
were cultural attitudes that militated against the concept of total
free choice in education. Post comments that the reintroduction of a
more traditional centralized state directed scheme oriented toward
targeting the lowest performing schools for additional funds has been
considerably more productive in addressing gaps in student
performance. The most notable aspect being the progress made with
schools in the countryside. It is suggested that to its credit Chile
retains the most decentralized educational system in Latin America,
where funding decisions are primarily oriented toward enhancing
student enrollment and achievement.
In the text we find that Peru’s progress
both in the last decade and a half stands in stark contrast to Chile.
It has lurched from one period of economic crisis to another the
turmoil often wreaking havoc on the educational funding. Throughout
the period educational policy has remained heavily politicized and
centrally controlled. In actuality the Ministry of Economy and Finance
makes all decisions concerning funding for education. This
unproductive approach is the antithesis of the client-oriented model
of educational demand with which Chile has experimented. The author
takes note that future reformers will have one factor to build on.
Peru’s population has since colonial times displayed a near
reverential regard for education as the key for personal advancement.
Mexico’s case stands between the two
poles exemplified by its textual counterparts. A principal issue of
concern for the author concerning Mexico is its failure to undertake a
concerted effort in the nineties to bridge the gap between urban and
rural students. An ominous development on the economic sphere was the
impetus given agricultural production by the NAFTA accords. Greater
demand for agricultural products has in turn created a viable option
to school for the children of the rural poor and will, if not
addressed, allow this problem to become intractable. The demand for
their labor is intense especially during peak seasons. To be
successful a policy designed to assist these children will require
more than just a reform of educational practice.
The strengths of this presentation and
insights to be gleaned from it are so manifold as to preclude their
being touched upon in so short a review. It unfolds as a
well-rehearsed narrative created by an intellect exceedingly well
versed in the particulars of the subject matter. There is as well an
enthusiasm and vibrancy to the prose, which carries the reader through
a very detail laden presentation. The data provided and the
methodology employed to obtain it inspire faith in its validity. The
refined critical sense of the author coupled with his voluminous grasp
of detail allows this piece to function as an ideal primer for
graduate students in the field of International and Comparative
Education. It is possible, without any suggestion of hyperbole, to
assert that this book merits inclusion on every required readings
list.
Michael Adams
Florida International
University
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