Archives & Special Collections - Selected African Holdings
University of Connecticut
Selected items with African Origination
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Publication Type
- 82
- 20
- 1
- 1
Organization
- 104
Year
- 33
- 7
- 16
- 3
- 1
- 3
Topics
- 43
- 32
- 31
- 27
- 22
- 20
University of Connecticut · 2002
A young girl picks coffee rather than going to school. Families dependent on money generated by coffee pull their children, particularly girls, out of school because they cannot afford school …
University of Connecticut · 2002
A young girl picks coffee rather than going to school. Families dependent on money generated by coffee pull their children, particularly girls, out of school because they cannot afford school …
University of Connecticut · 2002
Four million Kenyan children work instead of attending school because their families cannot afford school fees. Nearly two million child laborers in Kenya work on coffee and tea plantations.
University of Connecticut · 2002
A special class at the Ngegu Primary School in Kiambu, Kenya, for AIDS orphans, a few of whom have AIDS themselves.
University of Connecticut · 2002
Robin Romano prepared this document consisting of interview highlights from people in Kenya talking about child labor and related topics; this document was likely used in production of Stolen Childhoods.
University of Connecticut · 2002
A young girl picks coffee rather than going to school. Families dependent on money generated by coffee pull their children, particularly girls, out of school because they cannot afford school …
University of Connecticut · 2002
A boy attends a special class for AIDS orphans, a few of whom who have AIDS themselves, at the Ngegu Primary School in Kiambu, Kenya.
University of Connecticut · 2002
Children attend a special class arranged by the Child Labor Committee of the Kenya Plantation Agricultural Worker's Union. The children in this class range from 5-7 years old. Most are …
University of Connecticut · 2002
A young girl picks coffee rather than going to school. Families dependent on money generated by coffee pull their children, particularly girls, out of school because they cannot afford school …