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ILO100 – Law for Social Justice
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Edited by
George P. Politakis
Tomi Kohiyama
?omas LiebyPOLITAKISKOHIYAMA
LIEBYILO100
Edited by
George P. Politakis
Tomi Kohiyama
?omas LiebyInternational Labour Oce
Geneva 2019o?o?
Copyright © International Labour Organization 2019First published 2019
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? ???h? As the International Labour Organization"s centenary year draws to its close, this commemorative volume arising from the ILO100s-sLaw for Social Justice" academic conference, which took place in April 2019, recalls the indelible mark of law in the Organization"s life and action. ée rich contributions show that the ILO remains a captivating research leld for the academic community as well as a powerful vehicle for advancing social justice globally. Law can help normative institutions like the ILO to guarantee insti- tutional continuity as well as to lead change when needed. ée publica- tion bears testimony to this. All the important choices made by the ILO during its lrst hundred years link the past, the present and the future of the Organization in varying degrees. Law has played its part in this process. In this spirit, the ILO Centenary Declaration for the Future of Works-sadopted at the Centenary Session of the International Labour Conference in June 2019s-sis an instrument which reaorms the ILO"s values and priorities and steers it in the context of the realities of the 21st scentury. ée concept of a human-centred approach to the future of work, which is at the core of the Declaration, translates in contempo- rary terms, the commitment to humane conditions of labour" set out in the original Constitution of the ILO. ée ILO"s responsibility for main- taining a clear, robust, up-to-date body of international labour standards is reaormed together with the fundamental importance of adopting, pro- moting, ratifying and supervising those standards. Likewise, the call for full, equal and democratic participation of constituents in ILO"s tripartite governance is recognized as a precondition for the realization of social justice everywhere. ée Centenary Declaration is not meant to be merely a manifesto of good intentions. What matters lrst and foremost is that it should serve as a catalyst for action by the ILO"s constituents and the multilateral system. It is signilcant that a little more than three months ader its adoption, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution encouraging its implementa- tion. As the UN Secretary General stated, 'the ILO Centenary Declaration is much more than a statement of wishes or intent. It proposes a shi? in the paradigm of how we look at development [...] ?is is an ambitious Declaration, but setting ambitious goals and achieving them is part of the ILO's history [and] thanks to [our] e?orts, it will also be part of its future'. ?is collection of essays o?ers a wealth of expert knowledge on the ILO, international labour law and the broader human rights framework. It con?rms our common responsibility to help shape the international rules and institutions of the multilateral system of tomorrow based on the unwavering conviction that universal and lasting peace can be established only if it is based upon social justice.
Guy Ryder
Director-General
iv oss - law for social justice preface ................................................. iii introduction .......................................... 1PART ONE
1. ?e ILO and the Structural Transformation of International LawGeorges Abi
-Saab ......................................... 19 2. An Ideal World Like our World, but Completely Di?erentPhilip Allott
.............................................. 25 3.Les valeurs fondatrices de l?OIT et la promotion
de la citoyenneté sociale - Jalons historiques et dé?s contemporains Jean-Michel Bonvin ....................................... 31 4.L?OIT et la justice sociale (1919-2019)
Sandrine Kott
............................................ 49 rr. ezé rin íuége lns gnarvi mugeraé vdp ezénsrég 5.Frameworks for Understanding the ILO
José E. Alvarez
............................................ 59 6.Does General International Law Incorporate
the Concept of Social Justice?Marcelo G. Kohen
........................................ 91 7. Viewing the International Labour Organization?s SocialJustice Praxis ?rough a ?ird World Approaches
to International Law Lens: Some Preliminary InsightsObiora Chinedu Okafor, Titilayo Adebola
and Basema Al-Alami ..................................... 101 8.A Bridge and a Pivot: ?e ILO and International
Organizations Law in Times of Crisis
Guy Fiti Sinclair
.......................................... 123 eváié nl andeédeg vi ilooss - law for social justice rrr. áéeyééd pnaesrdé vdp ksvaeraé: rdeésdverndvi 9. ILO Convention Practice: Mixed Methods in Norm-Setting for Social Justice 10. Le rôle des résolutions des organisations internationales à la lumière de la jurisprudence de la Cour internationale de JusticeAlain Pellet
............................................... 149 11. General Assembly Action at the Final Stage of the Process of Progressive Development and Codi?cation of International Law by the International Law Commission Eduardo Valencia-Ospina .................................. 161 12.La contribution de l?OIT au droit des traités
Cristina Hoss et Santiago Villalpando
...................... 169 r. 13. ?e ILO and International Judicial Mechanisms:A Story of Control and Trust
Laurence Boisson de Chazournes
........................... 189 14. ?e Lost History of the ILO?s Trade Sanctions Steve Charnovitz ......................................... 217 15. Pushback Against Supervisory Systems: Lessons for the ILO from International Human Rights InstitutionsLaurence R. Helfer
........................................ 257 16.Decentralized Enforcement of International Labour
Standards: ?e Role of Domestic Courts
Erika de Wet
............................................. 279 h. vphvdardc vg ndé: rintg esrkvsergb vg v bnpéi 17. ?e ILO and Tripartism: ?e Challenge of Balancing the ?ree-Legged StoolJanice R. Bellace
.......................................... 28918. Tri-Plus: Re?ections on Opening the ILO?s Tripartite Structure
Guy Mundlak
............................................ 311 19.Tripartism as Sustainable Governance
Tonia Novitz
............................................. 337 photo gallery .................................................. 357 ?able of contents vii hr. vdnezés asnyd méyéi: ezé rin vpbrdrgesverhé esráudvi 20. Some Considerations on the Independence of Tribunals of the International Civil Service Giuseppe Barbagallo ...................................... 371 21.Le problème de la compétence rationeépersonae des juridictions administratives de l?OIT et des Nations Unies: comparaison et déraison? Pierre Bodeau-Livinec ..................................... 377
22. ?e Protection of Legitimate Expectations
in Global Administrative Law Louise Otis and Jérémy Boulanger-Bonnelly ................. 395 23.?e Contribution of the ILO Administrative Tribunal to the Development of Sta? Dispute Settlement within International Organizations
August Reinisch
.......................................... 439 hrr. ksnbnerdc udrhésgvi ségkéae lns gnarvi : 24.Beyond a Boundary: On Transnational Labour Law,
Discontent, and Emancipatory Social Justice
Adelle Blackett
........................................... 463 25.Right to Work and Rights at Work: Is there a Role
for the Human Rights Treaty Bodies?Virginia Brás Gomes
...................................... 485 26.?e Political Economy of Decency
Brian Langille
............................................ 50327. Labour Rights, Human Rights and Challenges of Connectivity
Vitit Muntarbhorn ........................................ 531 hrrr. édzvdardc ezé rbkvae nl rdeésdverndvi dnsbg: 28.Bene?ts and Limits to Labour-Related Corporate Social
Responsibility Codes
Shin-ichi Ago ............................................. 54929. ?e ILO?s Centenary Declaration and Social Justice
in the Digital AgePhilip Alston and Jackson Gandour
........................ 565 viii ilooss - law for social justice 30.International Law in the Making: ?e OECD Experience
Nicola Bonucci
........................................... 587 31.Enhancing the Impact of International Norms
with Special Reference to Women?s LabourRights and the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
Christine Chinkin ........................................ 597 32.Addressing Corruption: ?e IMF?s New Policy
Sean Hagan
.............................................. 619 33.quotesdbs_dbs33.pdfusesText_39
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