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child labor laws
- Laws passed over many decades, beginning in the 1830s, by state and federal governments, forbidding the employment of children and young teenagers, except at certain carefully specified jobs. Child labor was regularly condemned in the nineteenth century by reformers and authors ( see David Copperfieldand Oliver Twist), but many businesses insisted that the Constitution protected their liberty to hire workers of any age. In several cases in the early twentieth century, the Supreme Court agreed, declaring federal child labor laws unconstitutional. Eventually, in the late 1930s, the federal Fair Labor Standards Act was upheld by the Court. This law greatly restricts the employment of children under eighteen in manufacturing jobs.
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Example Sentences
The problem: pesky state child labor laws requiring that minors work a maximum eight hours a day when school is not in session.
From The Daily Beast
This is where child labor laws and child-protective services come in.
From The Daily Beast
The national government has encouraged the states in the enactment of stringent child-labor laws.
From Project Gutenberg
The passage and enforcement of rigid anti-child-labor laws which will cover every portion of this country.
From Project Gutenberg
Although child labor laws have been enacted in many states and by the United States Congress, they are comparatively recent.
From Project Gutenberg
Many parents make their children work where the compulsory education law and the child labor laws are not enforced.
From Project Gutenberg
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