Abstract

Introduction: Though the Convention on the Right of the Child (CRC) states that children have a right to education and to be protected from exploitative child labour, child begging is a widespread phenomenon. Children who beg experience stressful conditions but they continue to beg. This article explores the stressors and resources of Muslim child beggars in Dagbon in Northern Ghana and the consequences of their involvement in begging.Methods: This qualitative study uses “Draw and Tell” as a research instrument to look into the working environment of these children by bringing into focus the negative experiences they encounter in begging and the resources that enable them to cope.Findings: Though the children encounter negative experiences such as insults and beatings, they are motivated by their social networks, catering for their educational needs and seeing begging as temporary and a means through which they help their families.Discussion: High levels of poverty in Northern Ghana may account for children’s engagement in begging but it affects them physically, psychologically and cognitively. This has implications on their educational achievement and future economic opportunities. The CRC emphasises the need for children’s education but some children in Ghana continue to beg at the expense of their education.Conclusion: Although the government of Ghana is a signatory to international child rights documents, and Ghana has a children’s Act (Act 560), child beggars in Dagbon do not have their right to education protected. Local realities mean that parents follow religious and cultural traditions rather than national legal frameworks.

Highlights

  • Though the Convention on the Right of the Child (CRC) states that children have a right to education and to be protected from exploitative child labour, child begging is a widespread phenomenon

  • This study addresses three related research questions: What are the stressors and resources experienced by Muslim child beggars who live with their parents in Dagbon, Ghana? How does begging affect the children’s lives? In the context of current child rights debates, what are the implications of children’s involvement in begging?

  • In explaining the meanings of their drawings which symbolise the things that make them hate begging, it emerged that all the children encountered multiple negative experiences in the field as beggars

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Summary

Introduction

Though the Convention on the Right of the Child (CRC) states that children have a right to education and to be protected from exploitative child labour, child begging is a widespread phenomenon. Discussion: High levels of poverty in Northern Ghana may account for children’s engagement in begging but it affects them physically, psychologically and cognitively This has implications on their educational achievement and future economic opportunities. Organisations and agencies at national or international levels observe that begging by children symbolises an abuse of the child and this has become one of the child rights issues to various rights-based organisations in contemporary times. It is a form of child labour, an unacceptable practice according to the United Nations (UN) and the International Labour Organisation, ILO (IPEC, 2015). Studies show that child labour affects the educational achievement of the children involved because they record poor performance in school (John, 2015; Manjengwa, Matema, Tirivanhu, & Tizora, 2016)

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