2006
DOI: 10.1080/14649880500501179
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Children Conceptualizing their Capabilities: Results of a Survey Conducted during the First Children's World Congress on Child Labour*

Abstract: This paper reports the results of a research project that allowed children to define their capabilities as the basis of a bottom-up strategy for understanding the relevant dimensions of children's well-being. The subjects of this research were children participating in the 'Children's World Congress on Child Labour' held in Florence in May 2004, organized by the Global March against Child Labour and other associations. Children were invited to interact and express their opinions on the most relevant issues rel… Show more

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Cited by 187 publications
(138 citation statements)
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“…To include more people with disabilities, people from Paraty town and other nearby coastal communities were also included and meetings took place in Paraty town. There have been different attempts to generate capability sets, using surveys, focus groups & interviews (Clark 2003;Biggeri et al 2006), and deductive reasoning (Nussbaum 2000). This research used the approach of small group meetings and interviews.…”
Section: Methods Of Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To include more people with disabilities, people from Paraty town and other nearby coastal communities were also included and meetings took place in Paraty town. There have been different attempts to generate capability sets, using surveys, focus groups & interviews (Clark 2003;Biggeri et al 2006), and deductive reasoning (Nussbaum 2000). This research used the approach of small group meetings and interviews.…”
Section: Methods Of Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It maintains that children should go to school in order to become educated and healthy workers, albeit to benefit themselves and their households rather than their national economies (Hanushek and Wöβmann 2007;Robeyns 2006). More radically, the work of Amartya Sen and others in relation to 'human capabilities' identifies human beings as 'the ends of economic activity rather than merely its means', and defines development in terms of what people are able and free to be and do (Biggeri et al 2006: 63, see also UNDP, 1990). This approach moves beyond the narrow instrumentalism of the human capital approach firstly in declaring that children should go to school because being knowledgeable and having access to education are intrinsically valuable universal or 'basic' capabilities in themselves (Biggeri, 2007: 197;Robeyns, 2006: 78;Sen, 1992: 4), and secondly in citing the ability to get a job as just one of the many valued capabilities that schooling has the potential to expand.…”
Section: Why Should Children Go To School? the Accepted Role(s) Of Edmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Meanwhile, study conducted in Indonesia and Pakistan by [8] on the home-worker children have regards that children in this category have a higher probability of working and a lower probability of attending school than children which is not involve in any home-base activity. In addition, there is evidence of the feminisation of home-base from childhood, and female children have a double burden to carry.…”
Section: Other Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%