Abstract
Peter Kirby's new book addresses the neglect of a detailed examination of the occupational health of children in the “classic” Industrial Revolution period in Britain. Such inattention to the health of working children is perhaps unsurprising given the numerous methodological difficulties for such a study, for which Kirby's innovative solution is to use modern research into occupational health. He concludes the text with a call for historians to “challenge ingrained attitudes to child labour, both past and present,” and his nuanced approach to the complex causes and outcomes of poor health in child workers reminds us that the employment of children must be understood in context. In this sense, the book acts as a caution against the “othering” of states where child labor is common through its mental consignment to a horrific practice of the past in more “progressive” nations.1 An assessment of the impact of employment on children must always take account of the balance between costs and compensations. Cheap child labor could undercut and drive down adult wages, and thus did not necessarily increase the overall family wage, but as child workers were most likely to come from the very poorest families and particularly those where one or both parents were absent, the contribution a child could make might be the difference between starvation and survival.2 Focusing in particular on factory labor, Kirby's book seeks to offer “a major challenge to the predominantly pessimistic historiography of industrial child employment” (161). Kirby argues that historians have relied too heavily on the biased reports of factory reform commissions to the exclusion of dissenting voices, which often came from observers with more experience of factory communities. He contends that factories were, if anything, less dangerous to the health of child workers than was domestic industry, and that they were certainly safer than work in coalmines. Kirby finds the greatest body of direct evidence of work-related ill-health in the mining industry, demonstrated most startlingly in the growth differences between children employed in coalmines and those with other occupations (117–120). Given that other recent authors on the subject have concluded that industrialisation increased the extent and intensity of child labor, with consequent negative effects for health3, Kirby's alternative viewpoint contributes to a debate which shows few signs of abating.
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