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| Agricultural Laborers | 4 |
| Federal Legislation | 4 |
| Work Environment | 4 |
| Child Health | 2 |
| Child Labor | 2 |
| Farm Labor | 2 |
| Labor Standards | 2 |
| Migrant Workers | 2 |
| Occupational Safety and Health | 2 |
| Adolescents | 1 |
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| Reports - Evaluative | 3 |
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Laws, Policies, & Programs
| Fair Labor Standards Act | 1 |
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Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
General Accounting Office, Washington, DC. Program Evaluation and Methodology Div. – 1988
The demand for legal foreign workers for temporary or seasonal agricultural work now permitted under what is known as the H-2A program will likely increase as the employer sanctions in the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 limit the use of undocumented foreign workers. To protect U.S. farmworkers, the law requires that they be given first…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, Employment Practices, Estimation (Mathematics), Farm Labor
Guerrero, Peter F. – 2000
In response to a Congressional request, the General Accounting Office examined issues related to pesticide safety for children in agricultural settings. Pesticides can cause acute, chronic, or delayed-onset illnesses. Children may be exposed to pesticides through farm work; eating pesticide-treated foods; or contact with drift from pesticide…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, Child Health, Child Labor, Federal Legislation
Slesinger, Doris P.; Pfeffer, Max J. – 1992
This paper documents migrant farm workers as being among the most persistently underprivileged groups in American society. Migrant farm workers typically receive low wages from irregular employment and live in poverty with access to only substandard housing and inadequate health care. The lack of economic improvement stems from a number of…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, Economic Factors, Employer Employee Relationship, Farm Labor
Tucker, Lee – 2000
Agricultural work is the most hazardous and grueling area of employment open to U.S. children and is also the least protected. Adolescent farmworkers labor under more dangerous conditions than their peers working in nonagricultural settings and also face persistent wage exploitation and fraud. These adolescent workers are protected less under U.S.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Agricultural Laborers, Agriculture, Child Health


