Child Rights in China
China has the second-largest child population at 271 million, representing 14% of the world’s children. Impacted by both China’s rapid economic growth and important policy reforms, China has made significant progress in education, health, gender equality and child poverty, continuously improving the situation for migrant workers and the rural population.
Nevertheless, special attention from the private sector is needed to ensure a balanced socioeconomic development, both in order to ensure protection for the most vulnerable groups such as young workers, migrant worker parents and their children, and children who dropped out of work and as a result enter the labour market early. This coupled with the often untransparent hiring practices and widespread use of labour agents, creates risks for companies that they need to address.
An estimated 15.5 million children are left behind by their parents who migrated to coastal provinces for work in China’s manufacturing hubs. The separation can cause significant strain on family relationships, parent wellbeing and children’s development, as well as direct business impact. And while we observe a positive trend of more and more parents bringing their children with them, this often means loose access to the community support systems and challenges in accessing quality childcare and education.
Youth who are out of school and over 16 can struggle to find decent work and integrate into the formal workforce and are often pushed into more informal and less safe working positions, increasing the risk of child labour, including hazardous working conditions for young workers.
In addition, the size of China’s labour force is shrinking; creating a strong, reliable and well-skilled labour force is of essence for companies who want to continue to benefit from China’s advantages as a production country. Companies therefore need to take a strong child rights-based approach to create responsible, family-friendly and child-friendly supply chains in China.
Supporting You in China
The Centre has a strong team in China, our first programme country. With staff based in Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Shanghai, Beijing and Changsha, we deliver child rights programmes across a wide range of industry sectors. Many of The Centre’s most established services — including Child-Friendly Spaces, WeCare Family-Friendly Workplaces, migrant parent training, young worker training, and child labour prevention and remediation — were first piloted in China. As in all the countries where we operate, our focus is on supporting workers and their families while helping factories and production sites strengthen their business performance.
In 2026, we will expand this work through the launch of The Centre Learning Lab, our new global online training platform. The Learning Lab will offer a series of practical, high-quality learning opportunities for suppliers and business partners. Two of the first training sessions will specifically target Chinese-language suppliers, supporting them to minimise risks, strengthen factory management systems and understand mandatory human rights due diligence (mHRDD) and buyers’ due diligence requirements — helping suppliers stay compliant and competitive in a rapidly evolving regulatory landscape.
Contact us to learn more.
Browse Our Work in China
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