1 / 26

The IUF’s Transnational Company Work

The IUF’s Transnational Company Work. Transnational company work. IUF has prioritized two forms of activity in this area: Campaigns or actions against companies that attack basic rights

abrial
Télécharger la présentation

The IUF’s Transnational Company Work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The IUF’s Transnational Company Work ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  2. Transnational company work IUF has prioritized two forms of activity in this area: • Campaigns or actions against companies that attack basic rights • Proactive action and strategies to gain recognition from companies like Coca-Cola for the IUF as an international trade union federation ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  3. Recent campaigns and actions • Pakistan Sugar Mills • Belarus, trade union rights • BAT & Burma • Ecuador banana workers • Pearl Continental • Pepsi, Guatemala • Sky Chefs, USA • Coca Cola, Russia ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  4. That is campaign activity…. But what of pro-active IUF Company Strategy • What does it mean? • How is it developed within the IUF? ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  5. “Proactive” IUF company strategy has basically three stages: • Organize and build strength • Negotiate for international recognition from the target company • Move to international bargaining ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  6. Organize • Use education projects to: • Strengthen existing unions • Create New unions • Recruitment of those unions to IUF • Company networks (eg in Coca-Cola through global and regional meetings) ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  7. Negotiating recognition • Area of major progress in recent years • Achieved through seizing and building on opportunities, following-up on conflicts, maintaining contact with companies and dogged and determined negotiations ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  8. Recognition 1997 • Where were we in 1997? • Danone (formal) • Accor (formal) • Nestlé (formally limited to Europe but informally wider) • Coca-Cola (informal, irregular and limited having arisen from major successful international campaigns against Coca Cola over past years) ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  9. Recognition 2003 • Where are we today? • 26 companies and growing • Danone • Accor • Nestlé • Coca-Cola • British American Tobacco • Chiquita Brands International • Club Méditerannée • Compass ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  10. Del Monte Fresh Produce • Fonterra (formerly New Zealand Dairy Board, a major dairy transnational) • Fyffes • Hershey Foods • Imperial Tobacco • Interbrew • Japan Tobacco International • Kraft Foods ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  11. Mars • Parmalat • Philip Morris International • Scandinavian Tobacco Company • Altadis • Sodexho • Dimon Tobacco Leaf Processors • Standard Tobacco Leaf Processors • Univeral Tobacco Leaf Processors • Shangri-La Hotel Corporation ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  12. Company recognition of the IUF 1997 - 2003 ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  13. Bargaining….. • About what issues? • Not workplace issues but more over ….. • Rights and “space” • Space for….. • Rights to form and join unions (F. of A.) • Rights to collective bargaining • No discrimination, child and forced labour etc ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  14. What does this mean? • Setting standards through agreements with specific transnational companies (normally built on ILO Core Conventions) • Clarifying what the ILO standards actually mean • Establishing agreed union/company mechanisms for enforcing those standards • Negotiating agreed remedial action when those standards are not met ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  15. 8 formal IUF international worker rights agreements: • Danone: • Union Rights • Equality • Training • Information • Restructuring and employment • Accor – union rights • Chiquita – Rights, employment and health and safety • Fonterra – Rights, employment and health and safety ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  16. 3 “ formal” IUF/Company agreements to end conflicts • Del Monte – Guatemala (2001) • Interbrew – Montenegro (Dubrovnik Agreement) (2002) • Shangri-La Hotels – Indonesia (2003) ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  17. The case of Coca-Cola • Tough structure and tough company • US corporate culture • Common target of IUF actions and campaigns • Long-term target of IUF proactive strategy ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  18. “Proactive” work • Organize • Negotiate recognition • Bargain about rights ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  19. International organizing within Coca-Cola • Building unions (Guatemala, Philippines, India, Moscow etc) • Recruiting to the IUF - global IUF representation has never been stronger • Strengthening networks and our capacity for mutual solidarity • Global meeting in March 2003 and regional meetings throughout the year ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  20. Negotiating for recognition • De facto recognition for the Coca-Cola “system” - which means we deal with bottlers and franchise holders • Initially informal and irregular contacts • Stuck at the informal and irregular level for some years ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  21. Recognition breakthrough in 2003? • April 2003 agreement to hold twice-yearly meetings (starting in October 2003) • Small team from IUF: • Four affiliates and the general secretary • Head Office team from The Coca-Cola Company ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  22. Nature of the planned twice-yearly meetings • Exchanging information • Mainly on rights and labour issues • Possibly on corporate global, regional and local strategies • Discussing problems and abuses of worker rights • Exploring influence of The Coca-Cola Company on bottlers and franchise holders ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  23. Bargaining about rights with Coca-Cola? • Will see where the more formal twice-yearly meeting take us • Major challenge is an eventual agreement between the IUF and The Coca-Cola Company ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  24. Principal obstacles to progress • Tough “US corporate culture” • Structure of the company and issue of responsibility for bottlers and franchise holders ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  25. Principal strengths we have • Vulnerable company • Strong global IUF representation throughout the company • Proven IUF capacity to effectively act against Coke • Clear and determined IUF strategy • IUF’s unique capacity to maintain long-term pressure on Coca-Cola ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

  26. How the future with Coke looks and what it will need from us… • There will be difficult and slow process • Intelligent, tough but vulnerable company • Organizing globally will be one key issue • Maintaining constant pressure will be another key issue • Smart negotiating at global level a third • Effective solidarity and action from affiliates when necessary will be thekey issue ILO Turin Centre, November, 2003

More Related