Core Labour Standards’ and the Transformation of the International Labour Rights Regime
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Description
The past decade has seen a transformation of the international labour rights regime based primarily on the adoption of the 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, and the widespread use of the concept of 'core labour standards'. Notwithstanding the enthusiasm which has greeted these innovations, it is argued that the resulting regime has major potential flaws, including: an excessive reliance on principles rather than rights, a system which invokes principles that are delinked from the corresponding standards and are thus effectively undefined, an ethos of voluntarism in relation to implementation and enforcement, an unstructured and unaccountable decentralization of responsibility, and a willingness to accept soft 'promotionalism' as the bottom line. The regime needs urgent reforms, such as anchoring the principles firmly in the relevant ILO standards, giving greater substance to the Follow-up mechanism, extending monitoring under the Declaration to include an empirical overview of practice under the bilateral and regional mechanisms which have invoked ILO principles and the Declaration itself, and adequately funding the commitment to workers' rights.
Source Publication
Social Issues, Globalisation and International Institutions: Labour Rights and the EU, ILO, OECD and WTO
Source Editors/Authors
Virginia A. Leary, Daniel Warner
Publication Date
2006
Recommended Citation
Alston, Philip G., "Core Labour Standards’ and the Transformation of the International Labour Rights Regime" (2006). Faculty Chapters. 36.
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-chapt/36
