Stopping forced labour : global report under the follow-up to the ILO Declaration on fundamental principles and rights at work.
Stopping forced labour : global report under the follow-up to the ILO Declaration on fundamental principles and rights at work.
- Geneva : International Labour Office, 2001.
- xi, 128 pages: illustrations; 30 cm.
- Report (International Labour Conference), 89th session, 1(B) .
Introduction -- Part I: Forced and compulsory labour: a dynamic global picture -- The evolving faces of forced labour -- Slavery and abductions: a continuing problem -- Compulsory participation in public works -- Forced labour in agriculture and remote rural areas: coercive recruitment practices -- Domestic workers in forced labour situations -- Bonded labour and its eradication -- An extreme case: forced labour exacted by the military -- Forced labour related to trafficking in persons: the underside of globalization -- Prison-linked forced labour: contemporary dilemmas -- Part II: ILO assistance towards the elimination of forced and compulsory labour: experience to date -- Introduction -- International action against forced labour: the context of ILO work -- Forced labour and rural workers: past experience points to the future -- ILO technical assistance and technical cooperation in relation to the elimination of forced or compulsory labour -- Involvement of the social partners -- Assessing effectiveness: concluding comments -- Part III: Towards an action plan against forced labour -- The need for a concerted action plan -- The scope of an ILO action plan against forced labour: general considerations -- Forced labour: a common global responsibility -- Specific issues for future action -- Final remarks
9221119483
Forced labor--Congresses.
Right to labor--Congresses.
Employee rights--Congresses.
Introduction -- Part I: Forced and compulsory labour: a dynamic global picture -- The evolving faces of forced labour -- Slavery and abductions: a continuing problem -- Compulsory participation in public works -- Forced labour in agriculture and remote rural areas: coercive recruitment practices -- Domestic workers in forced labour situations -- Bonded labour and its eradication -- An extreme case: forced labour exacted by the military -- Forced labour related to trafficking in persons: the underside of globalization -- Prison-linked forced labour: contemporary dilemmas -- Part II: ILO assistance towards the elimination of forced and compulsory labour: experience to date -- Introduction -- International action against forced labour: the context of ILO work -- Forced labour and rural workers: past experience points to the future -- ILO technical assistance and technical cooperation in relation to the elimination of forced or compulsory labour -- Involvement of the social partners -- Assessing effectiveness: concluding comments -- Part III: Towards an action plan against forced labour -- The need for a concerted action plan -- The scope of an ILO action plan against forced labour: general considerations -- Forced labour: a common global responsibility -- Specific issues for future action -- Final remarks
9221119483
Forced labor--Congresses.
Right to labor--Congresses.
Employee rights--Congresses.