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Syllabus: GS- II & V: Constitution

Why in the news?

A recent rescue of a minor girl found confined under a bed in Guwahati has once again exposed the deep implementation gap in India’s child labour laws, especially in Assam, despite a strong legal framework.

The legal framework: strong on paper

  • India regulates child labour through the Child and Adolescent Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, which clearly prohibits employment of children below 14 years in most economic activities.
  • Section 14 provides for imprisonment up to two years or fines, or both, for violators.
  • Section 14B mandates a Child and Adolescent Labour Rehabilitation Fund, funded through employer fines and State contribution, to support rescued children till adulthood.
  • India has also ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, though with an early reservation on labour-related provisions reflecting economic realities of the time.

The core problem: failure of enforcement

  • Convictions are extremely rare, particularly in Assam, making penalties ineffective as deterrents.
  • Even when fines are imposed, they are often too small to outweigh economic gains from exploitation.
  • The Rehabilitation Fund, though legally mandated, remains largely non-operational in practice, denying rescued children long-term financial security.
  • Mandatory public awareness notices on child labour prohibition, required in transport hubs, markets, police stations, and public buildings, are largely absent.

Institutional capacity gaps

  • Enforcement rests with District Child Labour Task Forces, which often operate with:
    • No dedicated vehicles or emergency funds
    • Inadequate manpower
    • Heavy dependence on non-governmental organisations and personal goodwill
  • Rescue without rehabilitation leads to repeat exploitation, creating a vicious cycle rather than a solution.

Why children fall into labour

  • Most affected children belong to tea garden communities, tribal groups, migrant families, and urban poor households.
  • School exclusion due to poor teaching quality, corporal punishment, learning difficulties, and social discrimination pushes children into work.
  • Although welfare schemes exist under the Juvenile Justice framework, their last-mile delivery remains weak.

The way forward: prevention over rescue

  • Community-level prevention must be prioritised over reactive rescue.
  • Key steps include:
    • Operationalising the Rehabilitation Fund in every district
    • Ensuring speedy investigation and convictions
    • Strengthening District Task Forces and Child Helpline services
    • Mapping vulnerable children and linking families to social protection and sponsorship support
    • Making schools child-friendly and retention-oriented

Conclusion

  • Political intent exists, but institutional execution lags behind.
  • Child labour is not merely a law-and-order issue but a governance, poverty, and education failure.
  • Without sustained administrative discipline, accountability, and community engagement, child labour will persist despite strong laws.

One-line wrap

India’s child labour crisis is no longer about lack of law, but about lack of compliance, capacity, and prevention.

Exam Hook

Key Takeaways

  • India has a robust child labour law, but enforcement remains weak.
  • Rehabilitation and prevention are the missing links.
  • Community-level social protection is critical for sustainable solutions.

Mains Question

Despite a comprehensive legal framework, child labour continues in India. Examine the reasons for poor compliance and suggest measures to strengthen prevention and rehabilitation.

SOURCE

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