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U.S. Department of State
Appendix B to Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor,
February 26, 1998
APPENDIX B
Reporting on Worker Rights
The Generalized System of Preferences Renewal Act of 1984 requires
reporting on worker rights in GSP beneficiary countries. It states that
internationally recognized worker rights include "(A) the right of
association; (B) the right to organize and bargain collectively; (C) a
prohibition on the use of any form of forced or compulsory labor; (D) a
minimum age for the employment of children; and (E) acceptable
conditions of work with respect to minimum wages, hours of work, and
occupational safety and health." All five aspects of worker rights
are discussed in each report in a final section under the heading
"Worker Rights." The discussion of worker rights considers not only laws
and regulations but also their practical implementation, taking into
account the following additional guidelines:
A. "The right of association" has been defined by the International Labor
Organization (ILO) to include the right of workers and employers to
establish and join organizations of their own choosing without previous
authorization; to draw up their own constitutions and rules, elect their
representatives, and formulate their programs; to join in confederations
and affiliate with international organizations; and to be protected
against dissolution or suspension by administrative authority.
The right of association includes the right of workers to strike. While
strikes may be restricted in essential services (i.e., those services the
interruption of which would endanger the life, personal safety, or health
of a significant portion of the population) and in the public sector,
these restrictions must be offset by adequate guarantees to safeguard the
interests of the workers concerned (e.g., machinery for mediation and
arbitration; due process; and the right to judicial review of all legal
actions). Reporting on restrictions affecting the ability of workers to
strike generally includes information on any procedures that may exist for
safeguarding workers' interests.
B. "The right to organize and bargain collectively" includes the right of
workers to be represented in negotiating the prevention and settlement
of disputes with employers; the right to protection against interference;
and the right to protection against acts of antiunion discrimination.
Governments should promote machinery for voluntary negotiations between
employers and workers and their organizations. Reporting on the right to
organize and bargain collectively includes descriptions of the extent to
which collective bargaining takes place and the extent to which unions,
both in law and practice, are effectively protected against antiunion
discrimination.
C. "Forced or compulsory labor" is defined as work or service exacted
from any person under the menace of penalty and for which the person has
not volunteered. "Work or service" does not apply in instances in
which obligations are imposed to undergo education or training.
"Menace of penalty" includes loss of rights or privileges as
well as penal sanctions. The ILO has exempted the following from
its definition of forced labor: compulsory military service,
normal civic obligations, certain forms of prison labor, emergencies,
and minor communal services. Forced labor should not be used as a means of
(1) mobilizing and using labor for purposes of economic development; (2)
racial, social, national, or religious discrimination; (3) political
coercion or education, or as a punishment for holding or expressing
political views or views ideologically opposed to the established political,
social, or economic system; (4) labor discipline; or (5) as a punishment
for having participated in strikes. Constitutional provisions concerning
the obligation of citizens to work do not violate this right so long as
they do not take the form of legal obligations enforced by sanctions
and are consistent with the principle of "freely chosen employment."
D. "Minimum age for employment of children" concerns the effective
abolition of child labor by raising the minimum age for employment to a
level consistent with the fullest physical and mental development of young
people. In addition, young people should not be employed in
hazardous conditions or at night.
E. "Acceptable conditions of work" refers to the establishment and
maintenance of machinery, adapted to national conditions, that provides for
minimum working standards, i.e., wages that provide a decent living for
workers and their families; working hours that do not exceed 48
hours per week, with a full 24-hour rest day; a specified annual
paid holiday; and minimum conditions for the protection of the
safety and health of workers. Differences in levels of economic
development are taken into account in the formulation of internationally
recognized labor standards. For example, many ILO standards concerning
working conditions permit flexibility in their scope and coverage.
They may also permit countries a wide choice in their implementation,
including progressive implementation, by enabling countries to accept a
standard in part or subject to specified exceptions. Countries are
expected to take steps over time to achieve the higher levels specified in
such standards. It should be understood, however, that this flexibility
applies only to internationally recognized standards concerning working
conditions. No flexibility is permitted concerning the acceptance of the
basic principles contained in human rights standards, i.e., freedom of
association, the right to organize and bargain collectively, the
prohibition of forced labor, and the absence of discrimination.
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