Related Studies
Compensation and Workplace Conditions > Other Worker Protections
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Compensation and Workplace Conditions > Other Worker Protections
Asfaw, S., Davis, B., Dewbre, J., Handa, S., & Winters, P. (2014). Cash transfer programme, productive activities and labour supply: Evidence from a randomised experiment in Kenya. The Journal of Development Studies, 50(8), 1172-1196. doi: 10.1080/00220388.2014.919383
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Low-Favorable impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Low-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
Schady, N. & Araujo, M. C. (2006). Cash transfers, conditions, school enrollment, and child work: Evidence from a randomized experiment in Ecuador. Policy Research Working Paper No. 3930. Washington, DC: The World Bank. Retrieved from https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/8452
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Low-Favorable impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Low-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
de Hoop, J., Friedman, J., Kandpal, E., & Rosati, F. (2017). Child schooling and child work in the presence of a partial education subsidy. Retrieved from http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/501961504719564270/pdf/WPS8182.pdf
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Mod/high-Unfavorable impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Mod/high-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
Galang, I. M. (2016). Do conditional cash transfers reduce child labor?: Evidence from the Philippines (Unpublished Master's thesis). Tokyo, Japan: The University of Tokyo.
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Low-No impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Low-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
Galang, I. M. (2016). Do conditional cash transfers reduce child labor?: Evidence from the Philippines (Unpublished Master's thesis). Tokyo, Japan: The University of Tokyo.
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Low-No impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Low-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
Benedetti, F., Ibarrarán, P., & McEwan, P. J. (2016). Do education and health conditions matter in a large cash transfer? Evidence from a Honduran experiment. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 64(4), 759-793. doi:10.1086/686583
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Mod/high-No impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Mod/high-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
de Hoop, J. & Rosati, F. C. (2014). Does promoting school attendance reduce child labour? Evidence from Burkina Faso’s Bright project. Economics of Education Review, 39, 78-96. doi:10.1016/j.econedurev.2013.11.001
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Descriptive Analysis
Education and child labor: Experimental evidence from a Nicaraguan conditional cash transfer program
Maluccio, J. A. (2009). Education and child labor: Experimental evidence from a Nicaraguan conditional cash transfer program. In P. F. Orazem, G. Sedlacek, & Z. Tzannatos (Eds.), Child labor and education in Latin America: An economic perspective (pp. 187-204). New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. doi.org/10.1057/9780230620100_12
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Low-Favorable impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Low-Favorable impactsEducation and skills gains
Kazianga, H., De Walque, D., & Alderman, H. (2012). Educational and child labour impacts of two food-for-education schemes: Evidence from a randomised trial in rural Burkina Faso. Journal of African Economies, 21(5), 723-760. doi:10.1093/jae/ejs010.
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Child labor-Mod/high-Favorable impactsChild labor
- Education and skills gains-Mod/high-Mixed impactsEducation and skills gains
Kazianga, H., De Walque, D., & Alderman, H. (2012). Educational and child labour impacts of two food-for-education schemes: Evidence from a randomised trial in rural Burkina Faso. Journal of African Economies, 21(5), 723-760. doi:10.1093/jae/ejs010.
Topic Area: Child Labor
Study Type: Causal Impact Analysis
- Compliance-Mod/high-Unfavorable impactsCompliance
- Education and skills gains-Mod/high-No impactsEducation and skills gains