David L. Parker
Before Their Time: The World of Child Labor
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| Welder, India, 1995 |
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Physician and photographer David L. Parker takes us beyond the headlines and into the textile factories, stone quarries, and garbage dumps where children are forced--by unscrupulous adults or by lack of any other economic opportunity-- into the desperate cycle of child labor. His haunting and sensitive portrayal of these children preserves their dignity and humanity while exposing their often tragic circumstances.
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| Hauling bricks out of a kiln, Nepal 2002 |
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| Tin miner, Bolivia, 1998 |
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Child labor has all but disappeared in the United States, eliminated in the wake of reform movements and the passage of laws such as the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. But around the world, an estimated 350 million children continue to sacrifice their childhoods, their educations and often their health working in exploitative and unsafe conditions.
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Parker's photographs thrust another reality before our eyes.
David Parker has crouched with his camera in cramped tunnels deep in Bolivian tin mines. He has posed as a clothing importer to sneak photographs in Indian sweatshops. He has talked his way into brick factories in Nepal and climbed mountains of rotting trash in the garbage dumps outside Acapulco, Mexico
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| Hauling animal waste from a tannery, Bangladesh, 1993 |
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"Dr. Parker's work is compassionate, direct, and intimate. He has provided important historical documentation of an outgoing human rights problem. This may be the most comprehensive examination of child labor since Lewis Hine photographed child labor over one hundred years ago." --Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and United Nations High Commisssioner for Human Rights (1997-2002)--
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