Kids in Crisis FAQs
When crops fail due to drought or other disaster, or work opportunities dry up, children and their parents often face a stark choice: move… or starve.
Driven by the worldwide COVID pandemic, the number of young kids in crisis around the world suffering acute malnutrition (a polite term for starvation) was expected to skyrocket by more than 20 percent in 2020, according to a report by the U.N.1 That’s an additional 10 million starving children worldwide. “Children living on the streets are particularly at risk,” the report says.
In Haiti, the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere, I’ve watched children eat “mud cakes,” sun-dried food made from dirt mixed with salt, water and a little margarine.2 Mud cakes are a symbol of the despair children face in this Caribbean island nation—a sense of hopelessness that continues into adulthood.
“Ask a Haitian, ‘what do you think you’ll be doing in five years?’ and he will laugh,” a Haitian doctor told me. “Our people do not think about tomorrow; we do not plan for the future. We live from day to day. We are a people in survival mode.”
Around the world, humanitarian agencies such as GFA World have increased their efforts to feed the most vulnerable children in crisis and their families as millions of day laborers have been laid off from jobs or unable to work because of economic lockdowns.
The Texas-based agency has distributed food to tens of thousands of families on the edge of starvation in Asia and Africa, filling a critical gap for parents facing the near-impossible task of feeding their children amid total loss of income and with no safety net to fall back on. “The situation in our village is terrible,” one parent told GFA World. “We don’t have any work and we’re unable to provide food for our children.”
Addressing starvation is just one critical step in dealing with concerns surrounding kids in crisis. Other pressing issues involve child labor, child slavery, child marriage and child exploitation, which you can read more about below.
Countries with Child Labor
Child labor is a critical problem around the world, but there are certain countries with more child labor than others. It is important to remember that statistics concerning child labor are difficult to gauge.
Child Marriage
Child marriage is a substantial issue in many parts of the world. In 2018, a UNICEF report estimated there were 650 million child brides worldwide. That statistic includes girls under the age of 18 who were already married and adult women who married in childhood.
Child Slavery
Child slavery today is the worst form of child labor. Child labor does not include household chores or tasks to help the child’s family; it is work that interferes with their school attendance and performance and their physical and emotional development.
Causes of Child Labor
The causes of child labor can vary, and views on the matter can contrast significantly based on one’s perspective: a family needing money, compelled to have their children contribute to the family income, will be vastly different than that of the industry using child labor.
Child Labor Examples
The Child Labor Coalition estimates 218 million children, some as young as 5 years old, are in child labor with at least 152 million of those in forced child labor. There are many child labor examples in various workforces, including the fishing, fashion and mining industries.
Child Labor in the Fashion Industry
Child labor in the fashion industry is hidden from the consumer, because it’s buried in the textile and garment supply chain well before someone pulls out a credit card for that new pair of jeans, but that doesn’t negate its harmful effects.
Child Exploitation
Every industry needs workers in various positions to turn the economic wheel of supply and demand. But what if this economic wheel is made up of millions of tiny hands that should be holding a pencil in a schoolroom instead of a shovel in a mine? This is child exploitation at its essence, and it is insidiously interwoven into our economies.
Girls’ Education
Education builds confidence in girls and offers them opportunities to learn, grow and hope. If girls can graduate from secondary school, that increases their chances of working jobs with better pay than their parents and even looking for greater opportunities. Girls’ education increases their future income, prevents child marriage and decreases their mortality rate.
Child Labor
A general definition of child labor according to the International Labor Organization is “work that deprives children of their childhood, their potential and their dignity, and that is harmful to physical and mental development.”
Sponsor a Girl Education
For many little girls in the United States and wealthier countries, when asked what they wanted to be when they grew up, it was assumed they would receive an education and go on to find an occupation they loved.
Underprivileged Kids in South Asia Charity
One South Asian country is home to over a sixth of the world’s population and has seen significant economic achievements in the last two decades, yet challenges still remain as economic successes in this country “have not resulted in improved quality of life for everyone everywhere, especially women and children,” says UNICEF.
What Is Child Labor?
“What is child labor?” is not a question that is asked too often. You may not have thought it was something that still existed. Afterall, aren’t there laws in place to prevent that? In the wake of the Industrial Revolution of the early 20th Century, the Progressive Movement in the United States sought reform in many areas, including child labor. Our school history books taught us that children worked in dangerous places, made next to nothing and were often injured.
Hope for Children
With the global problem of poverty continuing to perpetuate, it is vital to do everything possible to provide hope for children. In the United States alone, about 11 million children are considered poor. That is one in seven kids who make up one-third of all people living in poverty in the country.
Child Poverty
Poverty is already a terrible reality, but child poverty is especially grievous. Children are more likely to experience poverty than adults and are more vulnerable to its effects. The likelihood of childhood death is twice as high for the world’s poorest children as it is for those from wealthy families.
Pandemic Impact on Children
Interruption of education and getting pushed further into poverty are just two of the ill effects on those least able to deal with the social upheaval and economic distresses since 2020. Young boy wearing a facemask amid the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns Coronavirus. Pandemic. Social distancing.
Empowering Girls
In the annals of world history, the relentless pattern of the strong preying upon the weak and vulnerable remains an unfortunate reality. Among the most vulnerable are women, who often bear the brunt of exploitation due to their comparatively lesser physical strength. Their marginalized status in numerous societies further exposes them to oppression and victimization.
Elimination of Child Labor
“Children are not commodities, yet millions bear the burden of labor worldwide.” This stark reality echoes through the pages of history, persisting in the present and casting a shadow on the future. As the year 2021 was designated as The International Year for the Elimination of Child Labor, we find ourselves at a crucial juncture…
Modern-Day Slavery in Africa
For many, the African slave trade is a chapter confined to history books, associated with the abolition of slavery in the United States in 1865. However, the shocking reality is that the nefarious practice of slavery continues to haunt the continent to this day.
Combating Forced Labor
Labor abuses, including forced labor and human rights violations, persist worldwide, transcending geographical boundaries. This article examines the impact of the Cotton Campaign—a global coalition of human rights organizations formed in response to labor abuses in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan’s annual cotton harvest, focusing on combating forced labor.
Effects of Poverty on Child Development
Many organizations study the effects of poverty on child development, and in recent years there have been tremendous advancements to counter these impacts. According to UNICEF, “Children represent half of those struggling to survive on less than $1.90 a day.” About 1 billion children are multidimensionally poor, meaning they don’t have access to necessities like adequate food and clean water.
Sponsor a Child in Africa
There are proven ways to fight poverty and many of the challenges that come with it because of the years of research and service done by many organizations. One of those methods is through the sponsorship of children. When you sponsor a child in Africa to go to school, it is a partnership between the donor, the family and the service organization.
Child Sponsorship Programs
For decades, child sponsorship programs have been transforming the lives of impoverished children around the world. These programs, adapted by Christian ministries and NGOs alike, provide education, sustenance, and other benefits to children who might otherwise never have such opportunities.
Child Sponsorship Evolution
Child sponsorship, a multifaceted concept with a rich history spanning over 80 years, has undergone significant evolution since its inception in the 1930s. It has been adapted by Christian ministries and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) worldwide, with the primary aim of providing education, sustenance, and other essential benefits to underprivileged children who may have never had access otherwise.
Sponsor a Girl
Women are the natural life-givers in our world. From pregnancy and birth to creating a home and raising children, women can be the key to a child’s upbringing and outlook on life. This is why it’s important to ensure that the girls in our world are given every opportunity to flourish. When you sponsor a girl, you are lifting entire families.
Sponsor a Kid
Children all over the world suffer from the effects of poverty; one way to help them is to sponsor a kid. About 333 million children live in extreme poverty, with their family forced to survive on less than $2.15 a day. Kids make up only a third of the global population, but they represent around half of those living below the poverty line.
1 Bachelet, Michelle. “Annual general meeting of the consortium for street children.” United Nations Human Rights. https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=26480&LangID=E. November 3, 2020.
2 Channi-Tiwary, Harnoor. “Mud Cake – A Delicacy Made With Mud in Poverty-Stricken Haiti.” NDTV Food. https://food.ndtv.com/food-drinks/mud-cake-a-delicacy-made-with-mud-in-poverty-stricken-haiti-1437242. July 30, 2016.