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Journal Article

Citation

Drydakis N. Child Abuse Negl. 2023; 146: e106490.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.chiabu.2023.106490

PMID

37879257

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Limited qualitative research indicates that beggar children might be victims of forced labor, and/or modern slavery. However, research quantifying the manifestations and health-related implications of forced child begging is missing in the literature. Because forced child begging might be physically, mentally, socially and morally harmful to children, research on the subject is needed to inform policymaking.

OBJECTIVE: This study addressed the gap in the literature on child begging. The work aimed to examine whether beggar children are victims of forced labor, as well as to identify the manifestations of forced labor in beggar children, and assess whether forced child begging relates to deteriorated health-related quality of life and mental health. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: The study focused on the capital city of Greece, Athens, where beggar children are not a hard-to-reach group. Cross-sectional data were collected in 2011, 2014, 2018 and 2022, with 127 beggar children taking part in the study.

METHODS: The study adopted the Anti-Slavery International research toolkit, which sets methodological guidelines on researching child begging. A scale was developed to quantify forced child begging based on the International Labour Organization's definition of forced labor. Multivariate regressions were performed with a view to answering the research questions.

RESULTS: The study found that most beggar children were forced by others to beg, experienced threats of violence, physical and verbal harassment aimed at forcing them to beg, and difficulty in terms of being allowed by others to stop begging. Moreover, it was found that forced child begging was positively associated with living with unknown people, hunger due to food unavailability the previous week, and negatively associated with native beggar children. In addition, it was discovered that forced child begging was negatively associated with health-related quality of life and mental health for beggar children.

CONCLUSION: Based on the study's findings, child begging encompasses elements of coercion and the deprivation of human freedom. These factors collectively amount to instances of forced labor and/or modern slavery. Policies should ensure that beggar children are removed from harm's way, and that those forcing children to beg are brought to justice, thus preventing forced child begging. Policies to reduce poverty, which constitutes the root of forced child begging, should also be considered. The goal is to create a protective environment where children can thrive, free from forced labor. In line with Sustainable Development Target 8.7, policy makers should take immediate and effective measures to eradicate forced labor, and end modern slavery.

Keywords: Human trafficking;


Language: en

Keywords

Mental health; Beggar children; Coercion; Forced labor; Health-related quality of life; Modern slavery

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