Projects
Our international grants support projects to combat some of the most abusive labor practices, including the use of child labor, forced labor, and human trafficking in global supply chains. ILAB-funded projects also promote trade partners’ compliance with the labor requirements of U.S. trade agreements and preference programs – helping to ensure a fair global playing field for workers in the United States and around the world.
Building Governments’ Capacity
ILAB works with governments to make them more effective in combating labor abuses, through efforts in areas such as data collection, monitoring, and enforcement. As a direct result of ILAB initiatives:
- More than 80 countries have strengthened their monitoring and enforcement of laws, regulations, policies, and programs to combat child labor, forced labor and human trafficking;
- More than 60,000 labor inspectors and law enforcement officials have been trained to more effectively enforce child labor, forced labor, and human trafficking laws and regulations; and
- Governments have adopted best practices to assist victims of child labor and forced labor. For example, ILAB worked in partnership with the Government of Paraguay to develop and pilot an electronic system that registers adolescent workers to ensure they are protected under the law and assist with enforcement of labor laws.
Assistance for Vulnerable Children and Families
ILAB projects adopt a holistic approach to promote sustainable efforts that address child labor’s underlying causes, including poverty and lack of access to education. Project strategies include linking vulnerable groups to existing government social programs, providing children with quality education or afterschool services, helping families improve their livelihoods to meet basic needs without relying on child labor, and raising awareness about risks of trafficking so that adults don’t end up in situations of forced labor.
ILAB at the Forefront of Rigorous Evaluation Research
ILAB continues to invest in impact evaluations of innovative interventions to broaden the global knowledge base on effective strategies for combating child labor and forced labor. ILAB’s randomized controlled trials, the gold standard for impact evaluations, allow governments and policymakers to make evidence-informed decisions about programs that affect child laborers and their families.
Find out what ILAB projects are doing in response to COVID-19.
Title | Amount | Grantee | Start Sort ascending | End |
---|---|---|---|---|
Setting National Strategies for the Elimination of Girls' Trafficking and Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children Nepal |
$170,000 | International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) | 09/29/1997 | 09/29/1999 |
Garment Factories in Bangladesh: Mainstreaming the Verification and Monitoring System for the Elimination of Child Labor, Phases 1 – 3 |
$2,083,624 | International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) | 09/29/1996 | 09/29/2004 |
The North and Northeast Program to Prevent Child Labor and Forced Child Prostitution, Phases 1 & 2 |
$690,000 | International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) | 09/29/1995 | 09/29/1996 |
Combating Child Labor in the Footwear Industry of Vale dos Sinos, Brazil |
$234,435 | International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) | 09/29/1995 | 09/29/1997 |
Awareness Raising: Indicator Training Workshop |
$33,000 | International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) | 09/29/1995 | 09/29/2001 |
Reporting on the State of the Nation's Working Children: A Statistical Program for Advocacy on the Elimination of Child Labor and the Protection of Working Children in the Philippines |
$500,000 | International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) | 09/29/1995 | 09/29/2002 |
Improved Labor Market Analyses |
$448,765 | Upjohn Institute | 09/29/1992 | 09/29/2000 |