C59 Minimum Age (Industry) Convention (Revised), 1937
Convention Fixing the Minimum Age for Admission of Children to Industrial
Employment (Revised 1937)
(Note: Date of coming into force: 21:02:1941. The Convention was
revised in 1973 by Convention No. 138.)
Convention:C059
Place:Geneva
Session of the Conference:23
Date of adoption:22:06:1937
Subject classification: Minimum Age
Status: Outdated instrument
The General Conference of the International Labour Organisation,
Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the International
Labour Office, and having met in its Twenty-third Session on 3 June 1937, and
Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with regard to the
partial revision of the Convention fixing the minimum age for admission of
children to industrial employment adopted by the Conference at its First
Session, which is the sixth item on the agenda of the Session, and
Considering that these proposals must take the form of an international
Convention,
adopts this twenty-second day of June of the year one thousand nine hundred
and thirty-seven the following Convention, which may be cited as the Minimum
Age (Industry) Convention (Revised), 1937:
PART I. GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 1
1. For the purpose of this Convention, the term industrial undertaking
includes particularly--
(a) mines, quarries, and other works for the extraction of minerals from the
earth;
(b) industries in which articles are manufactured, altered, cleaned, repaired,
ornamented, finished, adapted for sale, broken up or demolished, or in which
materials are transformed; including shipbuilding, and the generation,
transformation, and transmission of electricity and motive power of any kind;
(c) construction, reconstruction, maintenance, repair, alteration, or
demolition of any building, railway, tramway, harbour, dock, pier, canal,
inland waterway, road, tunnel, bridge, viaduct, sewer, drain, well,
telegraphic or telephonic installation, electrical undertaking, gas work,
waterwork, or other work of construction, as well as the preparation for or
laying the foundations of any such work or structure;
(d) transport of passengers or goods by road or rail or inland waterway,
including the handling of goods at docks, quays, wharves, and warehouses, but
excluding transport by hand.
2. The competent authority in each country shall define the line of division
which separates industry from commerce and agriculture.
Article 2
1. Children under the age of fifteen years shall not be employed or work in
any public or private industrial undertaking, or in any branch thereof.
2. Provided that, except in the case of employments which, by their nature or
the circumstances in which they are carried on, are dangerous to the life,
health or morals of the persons employed therein, national laws or regulations
may permit such children to be employed in undertakings in which only members
of the employer's family are employed.
Article 3
The provisions of this Convention shall not apply to work done by children in
technical schools, provided that such work is approved and supervised by
public authority.
Article 4
In order to facilitate the enforcement of the provisions of this Convention,
every employer in an industrial undertaking shall be required to keep a
register of all persons under the age of eighteen years employed by him, and
of the dates of their births.
Article 5
1. In respect of employments which, by their nature or the circumstances in
which they are carried on, are dangerous to the life, health or morals of the
persons employed therein, national laws shall either--
(a) prescribe a higher age or ages than fifteen years for the admission
thereto of young persons or adolescents; or
(b) empower an appropriate authority to prescribe a higher age or ages than
fifteen years for the admission thereto of young persons or adolescents.
2. The annual reports to be submitted under article 22 of the Constitution of
the International Labour Organisation shall include full information
concerning the age or ages prescribed by national laws in pursuance of
subparagraph (a) of the preceding paragraph or concerning the action taken by
the appropriate authority in exercise of the powers conferred upon it in
pursuance of subparagraph (b) of the preceding paragraph, as the case may be.
PART II. SPECIAL PROVISIONS FOR CERTAIN COUNTRIES
Article 6
1. The provisions of this Article shall be applicable in Japan in substitution
for the provisions of Articles 2 and 5.
2. Children under the age of fourteen years shall not be employed or work in
any public or private industrial undertaking, or in any branch thereof.
Provided that national laws or regulations may permit such children to be
employed in undertakings in which only members of the employer's family are
employed.
3. Children under the age of sixteen years shall not be employed or work on
dangerous or unhealthy work as defined by national laws or regulations in
mines or factories.
Article 7
1. The provisions of Articles 2, 4 and 5 shall not apply to India, but in
India the following provisions shall apply to all territories in respect of
which the Indian Legislature has jurisdiction to apply them.
2. Children under the age of twelve years shall not be employed or work in
factories working with power and employing more than ten persons.
3. Children under the age of thirteen years shall not be employed or work in
the transport of passengers or goods, or mails, by rail, or in the handling of
goods at docks, quays or wharves, but excluding transport by hand.
4. Children under the age of fifteen years shall not be employed or work:
a) in mines, quarries, and other works for the extraction of minerals from the
earth;
b) in occupations to which this Article applies which are scheduled as
dangerous or unhealthy by the competent authority.
5. Unless they have been medically certified as fit for such work:
a) persons who have attained the age of twelve years but are under the age of
seventeen years shall not be permitted to work in factories working with power
and employing more than ten persons;
b) persons who have attained the age of fifteen years but are under the age of
seventeen years shall not be permitted to work in mines.
Article 8
1. The provisions of this Article shall be applicable in China in substitution
for the provisions of Articles 2, 4 and 5.
2. Children under the age of twelve years shall not be employed or work in any
factory using machines driven by motor power and regularly employing thirty
persons or more.
3. Children under the age of fifteen years shall not be employed or work:
a) in mines regularly employing fifty persons or more; or
b) on dangerous or unhealthy work as defined by national laws or regulations
in any factory using machines driven by motor power and regularly employing
thirty persons or more.
4. Every employer in undertaking to which this Article applies shall keep a
register of all persons under the age of sixteen employed by him, together
with such evidence of their age as may be required by the competent authority.
Article 9
1. The International Labour Conference may, at any session at which the matter
is included in this agenda, adopt by a two-thirds majority draft amendments to
any one or more of the preceding Articles of Part II of this Convention.
2. Any such draft amendment shall state the Member of Members to which it
applies, and shall, within the period of one year, or, in exceptional
circumstances, of eighteen months, from the closing of the session of the
Conference, be submitted by the Member or Members to which it applies to the
authority or authorities within whose competence the matter lies, for the
enactment of legislation or other action.
3. Each such Member will, if it obtains the consent of the authority or
authorities within whose competence the matter lies, communicate the formal
ratification of the amendment to the Director-General of the International
Labour Office for registration.
4. Any such draft amendment shall take effect as an amendment to this
Convention on ratification by the Member or Members to which it applies.
FINAL
PART III. FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 10
The formal ratifications of this Convention shall be communicated to the
Director-General of the International Labour Office for registration.
Article 11
1. This Convention shall be binding only upon those Members of the
International Labour Organisation whose ratifications have been registered
with the Director-General.
2. It shall come into force twelve months after the date on which the
ratifications of two Members have been registered with the Director-General.
3. Thereafter, this Convention shall come into force for any Member twelve
months after the date on which its ratifications has been registered.
Article 12
As soon as the ratifications of two Members of the International Labour
Organisation have been registered, the Director-General of the International
Labour Office shall so notify all the Members of the International Labour
Organisation. He shall likewise notify them of the registration of
ratifications which may be communicated subsequently by other Members of the
Organisation.
Article 13
1. A Member which has ratified this Convention may denounce it after the
expiration of ten years from the date on which the Convention first comes into
force, by an act communicated to the Director-General of the International
Labour Office for registration. Such denunciation shall not take effect until
one year after the date on which it is registered.
2. Each Member which has ratified this Convention and which does not, within
the year following the expiration of the period of ten years mentioned in the
preceding paragraph, exercise the right of denunciation provided for in this
Article, will be bound for another period of ten years and, thereafter, may
denounce this Convention at the expiration of each period of ten years under
the terms provided for in this Article.
Article 14
At such times as it may consider necessary the Governing Body of the
International Labour Office shall present to the General Conference a report
on the working of this Convention and shall examine the desirability of
placing on the agenda of the Conference the question of its revision in whole
or in part.
Article 15
1. Should the Conference adopt a new Convention revising this Convention in
whole or in part, then, unless the new Convention otherwise provides:
a) the ratification by a Member of the new revising Convention shall ipso jure
involve the immediate denunciation of this Convention, notwithstanding the
provisions of Article 13 above, if and when the new revising Convention shall
have come into force;
b) as from the date when the new revising Convention comes into force this
Convention shall cease to be open to ratification by the Members.
2. This Convention shall in any case remain in force in its actual form and
content for those Members which have ratified it but have not ratified the
revising Convention.
Article 16
The French and English texts of this Convention shall both be authentic.
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