ACCEL Africa - Nigeria

About 43 per cent of Nigerian children, in the age range between 5 and 11 years are estimated to be involved in economic activities. (2017 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey)

In Nigeria, ACCEL Africa will focus is on the Gold and Cocoa supply chain and will concentrate its efforts on improving the legal, policy and institutional frameworks.

The project will support the capacity of members in employers’ and workers’ organizations, in enterprises, and in public bodies charged with fulfilling the legal and practical obligations of member States; and of workers’ and small producers’ organizations in the rural and informal economies so that they are better able to claim their rights to work free of child labour.

Latest

  1. Malawi: Employers guide on elimination of child labour

    27 March 2023

    This guide was designed to help employers and their associations in Malawi understand and take action against child labour.

  2. Code of conduct for employers on the elimination of child labour in Malawi

    27 March 2023

    This code offers guidelines to employers on the elimination of child labour and serves as an encouragement for government institutions, workers and employers organizations, local leaders, parents, teachers, children and communities to get involved in combating child labour.

  3. Code of Conduct: Guiding Against Child Labour for Businesses in Nigeria

    27 March 2023

    This document provides codes of conduct to guide private-sector organizations in Nigeria in protecting the rights of working children in Nigeria.

  4. Child Labour Guidance Tool for Businesses in Nigeria

    27 March 2023

    This guidance tool states actions that all companies in Nigeria should take to eliminate and remediate child labour in their operations.

  5. The ACCEL Africa Project to hold Capitalisation Workshop to Highlight Success in Eliminating Child Labour in Nigeria

    20 March 2023

  1. ILO Accel Africa project supports the drafting of the Nigeria Alliance 8.7 communication strategy in Lagos.

    The ILO office, through the Free Movement & Migration in West Africa project with funding from the European Union and the ECOWAS Commission, with support from the ACCEL Africa project, IOM and UNODC organized a four-day technical workshop to develop a communication framework for Alliance 8.7 in Nigeria and finalize the draft Alliance 8.7 Road Map.

    The workshop gathered approximately 40 participants who are Members of the Alliance 8.7 Technical Committee and are members of one of the three identified Priority areas. Members of the Technical Committee includes government officials; representatives of UN agencies, international organizations and CSOs; and representatives from employers and workers’ organizations.