International Labour Organization (ILO), is a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) dedicated to improving labour conditions and living standards throughout the world.
Established on 11 April 1919 by the Treaty of Versailles as an affiliated agency of the League of Nations, the ILO became the first affiliated specialized agency of the United Nations in 1946. In recognition of its activities, the ILO was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1969.
The functions of the ILO
include the development and promotion of standards for national legislation to
protect and improve working conditions and standards of living. The ILO also
provides technical assistance in social policy and administration and in
workforce training; fosters cooperative organizations and rural industries;
compiles labour statistics and conducts research on the social problems of
international competition, unemployment and underemployment, labour and
industrial relations, and technological change (including automation); and
helps to protect the rights of international migrants and organized
labour.
In its first decade the ILO
was primarily concerned with legislative and research efforts, with defining
and promoting proper minimum standards of labour legislation for adoption by
member states, and with arranging for collaboration among workers, employers,
government delegates, and ILO professional staff. During the worldwide economic
depression of the 1930s the ILO sought ways to combat widespread unemployment.
With the postwar breakup of the European colonial empires and the expansion of
ILO membership to include poorer and less developed countries, the ILO
addressed itself to new issues, including the social problems created by the
liberalization of international trade, the problem of child labour, and
the relationship between working conditions and the environment.
Among intergovernmental organizations the ILO
is unique in that its approximately 175 member states are represented not only
by delegates of their governments but also by delegates of those states’
employers and workers, especially trade unions. National representatives meet
annually at the International Labour Conference. The ILO’s executive authority
is vested in a 56-member Governing Body, which is elected by the Conference.
The International Labour Office in Geneva, Switzerland, composed of the
permanent Secretariat and professional staff, handles day-to-day
operations under the supervision of an appointed director general. The ILO has
international civil servants and technical-assistance experts working in
countries throughout the world. Among the ILO’s many publications are the International
Labour Review and the Year Book of Labour Statistics.
No comments:
Post a Comment