History Of Child Labor In The 1920s

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Child labor in 1920s Child labor is using an adolescent to work with minimal to no pay. In today’s society it is considered immoral, but that was not the case in the 1920s. In that time period child labor was very prevalent. Children of all ages would engage in this without a choice. One issue with this is the child never gets the proper education to prevail and get a well paying job. This was not just a job on the farm, there were many forms of labor such as factory work, agricultural work, and domestic work. The conditions were not fit for working, and the children were paid the bare minimum. Further, it was realised that child labor was harmful to the well being of the child. As a result, there were laws created to abolish it. Child labor …show more content…

One law would be the Keating-Owen Act. The Act was the first law to appoint limitations on child labor. President Woodrow Wilson signed the Act to put it into place. Even though the president passed the law, only eighteen states abided by the boundaries. “The Supreme Court ruled that it [child labor] was unconstitutional in...(1918) because it overstepped the purpose of the government's powers to regulate interstate commerce” (Keating-Owen Child Labor Act of 1916 (1916). It is a bit ironic that something that would be doing good would be deemed unconstitutional. Another law would be the ILO 138 Minimum Age Convention. It gave working rights to adolescents ages thirteen to fifteen and it allowed them to work with better …show more content…

N.p., n.d. Web. 21 Dec. 2017.

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