In most textbooks, all you are told about the ILO is that it failed to implement a 48-hour week. This is unfair; the ILO did much, much more than that.
This detailed analysis will tell you what the ILO tried to do, and will help
you decide whether you think it was a success or a failure.
Like the PCIJ, the ILO was a new, radical idea – the idea of
an international forum for regulating the conditions of labour had only been
mooted (by the Swiss government) in 1885.
Nevertheless, the idea of an ILO was warmly supported by
President Wilson, so on 11 April 1919 the Paris Peace Conference created an
‘International Labour Organisation’, and instructed it ‘to proceed at once with
its work’.
Membership
At first, the membership of the ILO was identical to that of the League, but when Brazil left the League in 1926 it did NOT leave the ILO, and in 1934 the USA joined the ILO but not the League. This was a critical event in the history of the ILO, because the Depression was at its height, and the political situation was becoming increasingly difficult; unlike the League, the entry of the USA saved the ILO.
It survived the war and in 1944, at Philadelphia, the ILO restated its founding
principles, and it has continued it work ever since under the aegis of the
United Nations.
Organisation
In 1921, the ILO had 250 officials to do its work; by 1930 this had risen to 400 (the figure in 1969 was 2800), so it was permanently understaffed (and it is amazing that it achieved what it achieved with so few officials).
Throughout its life, also, it depended on the donations of member-countries, so
it struggled for money.
The ILO met once a year, in July in Geneva. Each country sent a delegation comprised of two members of the government, a representative of the employers, and a representative of the workers/unions (2+1+1).
Delegates were frequently challenged as being ‘unrepresentative’, and one case
even got as far as being taken to the PCIJ.
Actions of the ILO – was it a success?
1. Direct intervention
The ILO made only one attempt at direct intervention, when it tried after 1924 to find employment for Armenian refugees displaced by persecution; by 1929, it had found jobs for only 50,000, and was obliged to pass the task back to the League of Nations.
In this, the ILO failed, and it never tried again.
2. Research and Technical Assistance
The ILO got a reputation for expertise in labour matters, which caused
many governments to seek its advice; in this, it was a success.
a. Information and statistics
In this area of its work, the ILO has been very successful, since it has ‘spread the message’ of good practice, and helped countries which wished to improve to do so:
• The ILO keeps a comprehensive library of every
publication about labour matters.
• The 1919 Washington Convention on Unemployment required states to send data on unemployment to the ILO, which gave it an overview of world unemployment figures.
The ILO also started to collect migration figures (1922-) and statistics of real
wages (1924-).
• Its first research project – about production, 1920 – although it was very controversial, formed the basis of the 1927 League of Nations World Economic Conference.
In 1921, the ILO conducted an enquiry into what caused unemployment, and in
1923, another enquiry investigated what caused Economic Crises.
• After 1924, the ILO collected information about trade
unions, and in 1928 (after its failure to adopt a Convention on freedom of
association), it instead started publishing examples of good labour relations,
which became best-sellers, forming a body of ‘good practice’ which many
countries have copied.
• From 1925, the ILO began to issue the Industrial Safety
Survey, on safety legislation and the prevention of accidents.
• In 1930, the South African government asked the ILO to
conduct an investigation into silicosis; it agreed a terminology and standard
practices, and began drafting a Standard Code of Industrial Hygiene (published
1933).
b. Advisory Missions
In this area of its work, again, the ILO has been very
successful, since it has ‘spread the message’ of good practice, and helped
countries which wished to improve to do so.
3. Decisions
The ILO produced two kinds of decisions:
1. Conventions – these are intended to have the authority of international ‘laws’;
2. Recommendations – these are a kind of ‘model code’
which are meant to stand as an example which countries are encouraged to try to
copy.
When a Convention has been formulated and passed by the ILO, those countries who are prepared to obey the Convention ‘ratify’ it; this does not mean that they do obey it, only that they promise to do so.
Thus, the Conventions adopted by the ILO are only binding on the countries which
ratify them, and even they may not obey them.
a. The Conventions
At its first meeting, at Washington, the ILO passed twelve
detailed Conventions.
By 1946, the ILO had adopted 67 Conventions, which had
together received 902 ratifications from a total of 50 countries.
Not every area in which the ILO has made rulings has been successful; click on the
yellow arrows to see what you think:.
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