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Counting Child Domestic Servants in Latin America
Authors:Levison Deborah  Langer Anna
Institution:Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, 301 - 19 Avenue South, Minneapolis MN 55455 USA, Tel. 612-624-3540, dlevison@umn.edu.
Abstract:This paper summarizes trends in the use of child domestic servants in six Latin American countries using IPUMS-International census samples for 1960 to 2000. Child domestics are among the most vulnerable of child workers, and the most invisible. They may be treated kindly and allowed to attend school, or they may be secluded in their employers' home, overworked, verbally abused, beaten, and unable to leave or report their difficulties to kin. Estimates and imputations are based on labor force and relationship-to-head variables. We find that domestic service makes up a substantial fraction of girls' employment in some countries. We also analyze trends in live-in versus live-out status and school enrollment of child domestic servants. While all child workers are disadvantaged in enrollment relative to non-workers, domestics are sometimes better off than non-domestic workers. In some samples, live-ins are more likely to go to school than live-out child domestics. In others, they are substantially worse off.
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