{"doc_desc":{"title":"Child Labour Survey 2000","idno":"DDI-NGA-NBS-CL-2000-V1.1","producers":[{"name":"National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)","abbr":"NBS","affiliation":"Fedral Government of Nigeria (FGN)","role":"Documentation of Study"}],"prod_date":"2009-02-13","version_statement":{"version":"Verson 1.1"}},"study_desc":{"title_statement":{"idno":"DDI-NGA-NBS-CL-2000-v1.1","title":"Child Labour Survey 2000","alternate_title":"CL 2000"},"authoring_entity":[{"name":"National Bureau of Statistics","affiliation":"Fedral Government of Nigeria (FGN)"}],"oth_id":[{"name":"National Advisory Committee","affiliation":"Fedral Government of Nigeria (FGN)","role":"Technical Support"}],"production_statement":{"producers":[{"name":"Federal Ministry of Employment, Labour and Productivity","abbr":"FMEL&P","affiliation":"Fedral Government of Nigeria (FGN)","role":"collaboration"},{"name":"Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Youth Development","abbr":"FMW&YD","affiliation":"Fedral Government of Nigeria (FGN)","role":"collaboration"}],"copyright":"(c)NBS 2007","prod_date":"2008-05-21","funding_agencies":[{"name":"International Labour Organization","abbr":"ILO","role":"Funding"},{"name":"Statistical Information and Monitoring Programme on Child Labour","abbr":"SIMPOC","role":"Funding"},{"name":"National Bureau of Statistics","abbr":"NBS","role":"Technical Support"}]},"distribution_statement":{"contact":[{"name":"Mrs A.N. Adewimbi","affiliation":"HOD: INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY DEPT., ","email":"aanadewimbi@yahoo.com","uri":"http:\/\/www.nigerianstat.gov.ng"},{"name":"DR G.O. Adewoye","affiliation":"HOD: SURVEY COORDINATOR","email":"georgeadewoye@yahoo.com","uri":"http:\/\/www.nigerianstat.gov.ng"},{"name":"Biyi Fafunmi","affiliation":"Data Curator","email":"biyifafunmi@nigerianstat.gov.ng","uri":"http:\/\/www.nigerianstat.gov.ng"},{"name":"Mrs A. A. Akinsanya","affiliation":"Data Archivist","email":"paakinsanya@nigerianstat.gov.ng","uri":"http:\/\/www.nigerianstat.gov.ng"}]},"series_statement":{"series_name":"Labor Force Survey [hh\/lfs]","series_info":"With the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with ILO-IPEC in\nAugust 2000, the Nigerian government increased its commitment to\nprogrammes aimed at investigating and combating child labour. In 2000,\nthe Federal Office of Statistics (FOS), in collaboration with agencies\nresponsible for labour policies, standards and administration as well as\nchild welfare, carried out a Child Labour Survey (CLS) as a module of the\nGeneral Household Survey (GHS). The collaborating agencies with FOS\nwere the Federal Ministry of Employment, Labour and Productivity\n(FMEL&P), and Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Welfare\n(FMWA&SW).\nILO carried out the training of relevant staff on survey methodology,\nquestionnaire design, data analyses and data base design and\nmanagement. Technical assistance was received from national and\ninternational consultants in the areas of data analyses and report writing.\nThe strategy of the programme was not only to collect, analyse, and\ndisseminate the required statistical information on child labour, but also to\nbuild the in-country capacity of Nigeria to carry out child labour surveys at\nregular intervals in the future."},"version_statement":{"version":"v1.1. Edited data","version_date":"2009-02-21","version_notes":"v 1.0  was original release in 2008\nv1.1. adding variable labels"},"study_info":{"keywords":[{"keyword":"child"},{"keyword":"age"},{"keyword":"education"},{"keyword":"work"},{"keyword":"street children"},{"keyword":"Child Labour"}],"topics":[{"topic":"unemployment [3.5]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"},{"topic":"working conditions [3.6]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"},{"topic":"basic skills education [6.1]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"},{"topic":"vocational education [6.7]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"},{"topic":"health care and medical treatment [8.5]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"},{"topic":"children [12.1]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"},{"topic":"youth [12.10]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"}],"abstract":"The overall concern of the study was to obtain information, which can be\nused to profile child labour, prioritize and monitor the worrisome problems\nof working children.\nThe first specific concern was to determine the categories of the\neconomic activities of children in rural and urban areas and the sectors in\nwhich they work in order to obtain valid profile. The survey was designed\nto identify categories of child labour including unpaid family workers, paid\nworkers in agricultural sectors, apprentices, as well as nomadic activities\nand household keeping activities of children.\nThe second concern was the determination of the conditions under which\nchildren work, namely; regularity, time-demand, intensity, periods,\nproblems and hazards of work. Moreover, information was obtained on\nthe physical and social environment of work.\nThe third concern of the survey was to obtain information on the attributes\nof children who carried out different categories of work such as age,\ngender, socio-economic status and other circumstances of their families\nas well as their ages at commencement of work and their educational and\nhealth status.\nThe fourth concern of the study was to determine why children worked.\nImportantly, the questionnaire items, which provided information on\nhousehold composition and demographic characteristics, yielded rich\ninformation to determine the reasons why children work.","coll_dates":[{"start":"2000-12-15","end":"2000-12-31","cycle":"15 Days"}],"nation":[{"name":"Nigeria","abbreviation":"NGA"}],"geog_coverage":"National Coverage State Sector","analysis_unit":"Household, children age 5-17","universe":"Children age 5 to 17 years","data_kind":"Sample survey data [ssd]","notes":"Coverage and scope\nThe survey, which had a national coverage, included the 36 states of the\nfederation including the Federal Capital Territory. It was designed to\ninvestigate all aspects of work carried out by children in the 5 to 17 years\nage group.\nIdentification Division\nCharacteristics of all members of household aged 5 years and over \nChildren aged 5 - 17 years\nEconomic activity of Children aged 5 - 17 years old last months\nHousehold production activity of children 5-17 years of age"},"method":{"data_collection":{"data_collectors":[{"name":"National Bureau of Statistics","abbr":"NBS","affiliation":"Fedral Government of Nigeria (FGN)"}],"sampling_procedure":"The sampling designs for this survey facilitated the provision of estimates\nat national, zonal, and to a reasonable extent, state levels. The sample\ndesign of NISH was used for the household based component while area\nsampling design was used for the street children component of the child\nlabour survey.\nFor the household based component of the survey, sixty enumeration\nareas (EAs) were selected and sensitized in each state while thirty\nenumeration areas were selected at the Federal Capital Territory (FCT),\nAbuja. Ten housing units (HUs) were selected in each EA. Members of\nhouseholds within the selected housing units were interviewed. An\nestimated national sample size of 21,900 was anticipated, while a sample\nsize of 600 households was expected in each state, excepting Abuja with\n300 households.\nPurposive sampling design was used to obtain samples of 200 to 400\nstreet children in three selected cities in each of the thirty- six (36) states\nof the Federation. Valuable information obtained from members of the\nNational Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) and others\nfacilitated the selection of street children in these cities.","coll_mode":["Face-to-face [f2f]"],"research_instrument":"The Household questionnaire: This instrument consists of two sections; the first section obtained informatio\nn on demographic and socio-economic composition of households whilst the second section obtained \ndirect information from the children in householdson their schooling, non-schooling and work activities. \nIt also obtained information on the social, psychological and health components of children\u2019s work.\nIndividual questionnaire: This instrument was specifically designed to collect data on the living and working\nconditions of children on thestreets.","sources":[[]],"coll_situation":"Training\nTraining was organised at the national and zonal levels for the\npersonnel who participated in the main survey.\nNational training\nThe trainees at the national level consisted of three categories of\nofficers whose roles were crucial to the successful implementation of\nthe survey, namely: Trainers at the zonal level, Fieldwork monitoring\nofficers and Data processing officers.\n\nZonal level training\nThe training was organized in six states, representing the six geopolitical\nzones of the country. The beneficiaries of the zonal training\nwere field staff and coordinators of the Federal Office of Statistics (FOS)\ncomprising of enumerators, interviewers, supervisors, state officers,\nzonal controllers and state statistical agencies.\n\nFieldwork organization and monitoring level officers\nData collection (Team Arrangement)\nThe FOS permanent field staff that were resident in the enumeration\nareas were responsible for data collection during the survey. For the\nhousehold component, each household head or a responsible adult in\nthe household gave information about the household in general, while\nthe children supplied information about themselves. For the street\nchildren component, the field staff, equipped with information obtained\nfrom members of NURTW and others, visited identified vicinities to\nlocate and interview the children.\nThe field staff consisted of enumerators, interviewers and supervisors.\nThe field coordination team was composed of the State Officers and\nZonal Controllers. The State Officer in each state coordinated all field\noperations, while the Zonal Controllers in each zone supervised and\ncoordinated the states in their zones.\nThe field staff in each state were constituted into three roving teams.\nEach team was made of two enumerators and a supervisor. A team\ncovered 20 EAs in 40 days. In other words, 1 EA was covered in 2 days\nincluding inter EA travels. The same team of two enumerators and one\nsupervisor also interviewed between 67-134 street children in each\nstate in about 7-14 days. In other words, a team interviewed an\naverage of 10 street children in a day.\n\nSupervision and state quality control\nIn order to ensure authenticity of collected data, the supervision and\nmonitoring of field operation were carried out at three levels. Firstly, the\nsupervisors of the roving team promptly corrected errors while still within\nthe EA. Secondly, the State Officer visited the field staff occasionally in\norder to monitor their operations, crosscheck and endorse the\ncompleted questionnaires. The Zonal Controller who crosschecked the\ncompleted questionnaires submitted to him by the State Officers under\nhis jurisdiction carried out the final level of supervision. To improve the\nalertness of the field team, the Zonal Controller occasionally visited\nsome of the states.\n\nSupervision and national monitoring\nIn order to enhance the quality of data collection, a monitoring strategy\nwas devised for members of the technical team from FOS headquarters\nand other stakeholders, namely; CBN, FMEL&P, NMB, NpopC and NDE\n\nData retrieval\nThe completed and thoroughly edited questionnaires were submitted by\nthe Supervisors to the State Officers who in turn sent them to their\nZonal Offices for onward transmission to Lagos Head Office.\nData processing\nManual editing\nThe subject matter staff at the headquarters office carried out the\nmanual editing of the completed questionnaires retrieved from the 36\nstates of the federation including FCT, Abuja. The manual editing was\ncarried out in order to effect final corrections on errors detected on the\ncompleted questionnaires. Such errors included omission,\ninconsistencies, double entries, impossibility as well as transcription and\ncalculation ones.\nData entry\/analyses\nThe staff of Computer Management and Information Services (CMIS)\ncarried out the entry of the edited questionnaires, running programmes\nto further detect inconsistencies and other related errors as part of final\nediting. Tables were produced from the analyses.","act_min":"Each state had a supervisor attached to the interviewers in the state except Lagos state were there were more establishments to be covered hence, 4 supervisors were attached. The fieldwork was also monitored by NBS and EFCC Hqtrs staff. Monitoring exercise was carried out by 45 NBS Headquarter staff between 7th \u2013 16th of September, 2007. At least one staff will monitored field work in a state for 10 days. Monitoring officers to brought completed records to NBS headquarters in Abuja. \n\nState officers monitored the field work in thier various state for 5 days.\n\nZonal controller monitored the field work in at least two states within the zone for 10 days.","weight":"No weight attached","cleaning_operations":"Data processing was done centrally at NBS Headquarters, Abuja.\n 30 Data entry staff and 15 Editors were engaged\n Censuses and Surveys Program (CSPRO)  was used for data entry.\n  SPSS was used for final analysis"},"analysis_info":{"response_rate":"There was a very high response rate in all the states. The response\nrate for the whole country was 99.2 percent. The response rate in\nindividual states was above 90 percent with the exception of Kebbi\nState, which had 88.7 percent response rate."}},"data_access":{"dataset_use":{"conf_dec":[{"txt":"The confidentiality of the individual respondent is protected by law (Statistical Act 2007)\nThis is published in the Official Gazette of the Federal republic of Nigeria No. 60 vol. 94 of 11th June 2007. See section 26 para.2. Punitive measures for breeches of confidentiality are outlined in section 28 of the same Act.","required":"yes"}],"contact":[{"name":"National Bureau of Statistics (Nbs)","email":"www.nigerianstat.gov.ng"}],"cit_req":"National Bureau of Statistics,Child Labour Survey 2000-v.1.1","conditions":"A comprehensive data access policy is been developed by NBS, however section 27 of the Statistical Act 2007outlines the data access obligation of data producers which includes the realease of properly anonymized micro data.","disclaimer":"The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses."}}},"schematype":"survey"}