Abstract:
Children rural to urban migration was alarmingly increasing due to myriads of driving
forces. Therefore, this study aimed to examine children rural to urban migration causes and
its effects on migrant children’s life in the case of Sodo town. To attain this objective, the
mixed research approaches of qualitative research designs with survey of simple descriptive
methods were employed. 146 sample respondents were selected by using snow ball sampling
techniques. Besides, key informants, migrant interviewers and FGD participants were
purposively selected to collect primary data’s. The data’s were analyzed qualitatively
through narration and describing the quantified data’s through simple tabulations forms. The
findings on economic factors identified that the low agricultural farmland and unemployment
at family level were the dominant economic factors for child migration. In addition, the
absence of parents and large family sizes were also taken as the major family related social
factors. Moreover, the aspiration to live as a better life, better job options and peer group
pressures were also the main pull factors. Furthermore, lack of the expected jobs and
homelessness were identified as the difficult living status of migrants. Finally, the migrants
were vulnerable to complex socio-economic, physical and psychological abuses, and other
health related problems. At the end, the study recommended that the concerned bodies should
strongly work on the economic development programmes to improve the rural poor families’
livelihoods, giving more attention to awareness creation works, promoting and strengthening
CRC committee and other organizations to overcome children rural to urban migration and