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The Department of Youth Development (যুব উন্নয়ন অধিদপ্তর) is a government department of Bangladesh responsible for the development of the youth population. It is located in Motijheel, Dhaka, Bangladesh. Faruk Ahmed is its director general. [1] [2] [3]
In 2006, Bangladesh passed a Labour Law setting the minimum legal age for employment as 14. Nevertheless, the enforcement of such labour laws is virtually impossible in Bangladesh because 93% of child labourers are employed in the informal sector such as small factories and workshops, on the street, in home-based businesses and domestic employment.
Volunteer for Bangladesh [3] is a youth development program of JAAGO Foundation whose mission is to inspire, mobilise, and support a network of volunteers who work towards creating a better and more equitable society. Currently, they have over 50,000 members throughout 64 districts of Bangladesh.
The Young Bangla campaign was launched by the government of Bangladesh on 15 November 2014 with the stated goal of training young people in Bangladesh in different skills by 2020. [ 5 ] Initiatives
Ministry of Youth and Sports also works as guardian to the Department of Youth Development which is the only enforcing agency of government programs and programmes for the youth and has services in 64 sections and 476 sub sections, and 60 institutional training centers throughout the country. [4] [5]
Youth in Bangladesh (4 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Society of Bangladesh" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. ... Culture of Bangladesh;
Student politics in Bangladesh is reactive, confrontational, and violent. Student organizations act as armaments of the political parties they are part of. [1] So every now and then there are affrays and commotions. [2] Over the years, political clashes and factional feuds in universities killed many, seriously interfering with academics. [3]
Society in Bangladesh in the 1980s, with the exception of the Hindu caste system, was not rigidly stratified; rather, it was open, fluid, and diffused, without a cohesive social organization and social structure. Social class distinctions were mostly functional, however, and there was considerable mobility among classes.