LABOUR RIGHTS
Increased efforts are also required to develop participatory approaches to minority
protection in employment. Special attention should be paid to multiple discrimination against minority women. Discrimination against minorities is often linked
to racism, xenophobia and related intolerance, so the ILO promotes training and
awareness-raising for greater tolerance and respect within societies.
Case study – Teaching Romanian and minority languages
In addition to the Committee of Experts which is charged with regular supervision of
ILO Standards, the bodies set up under the ILO’s special procedures have also
frequently dealt with situations of specific minorities. A landmark case concerning
Romania led to the adoption, in 1991, of a report of the Commission of Inquiry set
up under Article 26 of the ILO Constitution to examine the observance of
Convention No. 111. The report contains important indications concerning the
applicability of Convention No. 111 to the situation of minorities and the obligations
of state parties in this context. The Commission of Inquiry found that the
government should dismantle all instruments of the policy of assimilation and
discrimination, and that it should adopt a language policy that would meet the
cultural and economic needs of minorities, including through an appropriate balance
in the teaching of Romanian and minority languages so that all citizens master the
Romanian language, while enabling minorities to engage in trades and professions
using their own language. The Commission also decided that the situation of the
Roma should be improved by means of an integrated programme drawn up in
collaboration with their representatives, covering education, employment, housing,
and other elements necessary to their progress. The Committee of Experts
continues to follow Romania’s progress in improving the situation of Roma in the
labour market.
Notes
1
The ILO uses the term ‘indigenous and tribal’ instead of ‘indigenous’ alone as the UN
does. This indicates that the issue being addressed is not chronological priority in a
given area – who got there first – but rather a particular form of social organization.
2
ILO, Decent Work, Report of the Director-General to the 87th session of the International
Labour Conference, 1999.
3
4
Declaration of Philadelphia, Article II.a – added to the ILO Constitution in 1946.
For more details on these features of Convention No. 111 see ILO, ‘Equality in
Employment and Occupation’, General Survey by the Committee of Experts, 75th
session of the International Labour Conference, 1988.
5
An example of indirect discrimination would be a requirement that all police wear
79