LAD/Blog #28: Keating-Owen Child Labor Act

The Keating-Owen Child Labor Act was an Act passed in 1916 prohibiting the shipment of goods or products between states if the product was worked on by a child in the past 30 days. Children younger than fourteen cannot work on these items and children between fourteen and sixteen cannot work more than eight hours in a day, six days a week, after seven, or before six. This act contributed to the progressive movement by regulating the conditions in which employees work. However, the Supreme Court declared this law unconstitutional on the grounds that child labor was not involved with interstate commerce therefore, the states must regulate it.

Similarly, in John Spargo's The Bitter Cry of the Children, he advocated against child labor. 

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