Rallies, activist sessions, labor platforms, global gatherings and more—-during this year’s 16 Days of Violence Against Women, Solidarity Center’s diverse efforts around the world are all centered on the same goal: ratification and implementation of a treaty to end...
IMPROVING WORKER HEALTH AND WELL-BEING THROUGH LEADERSHIP, ORGANIZING AND COLLECTIVE ACTION
Our focus on building strong trade unions would not be complete without challenging all forms of worker repression, particularly how violence against women exacerbates the inequalities they face in their workplaces and limits their ability to push for the changes they want and need.
Violence against women in the workplace causes women to leave their jobs or discourages them from entering fields where they anticipate experiencing it. Not only does this perpetuate occupational segregation and the gender pay gap, it comes at a significant cost to employers and the economy in general.
- South Africa lost an estimated 1.3 percent of the country’s GDP in 2014 due to violence against women.
- The productivity cost of sexual harassment in the Cambodian garment industry is $89 million annually.
- Violence against women and men was estimated to cost the European Union more than $32.5 billion euros in 2021.
Our approach
For nearly 30 years, we have prioritized eradicating violence against women on the job by developing grassroots strategies with women workers, their unions and women’s rights organizations.
We’ve developed multifaceted, bold programs that focus on:
- Advancing women worker leadership development through our Leadership for Unity, reNewal and Amplification (LUNA) program using a trauma-informed curriculum with our women worker partners.
- Worker rights education.
- Coalition building and grassroots movement-building and organizing.
- Using collective action to build power to bargain legally binding employer agreements that address and prevent violence against workers.
- Legal reform advocacy to hold governments accountable, including the ratification and implementation of International Labor Organization Convention 190 (C190).
These comprehensive programs are delivered across multiple sectors in more than 26 countries and cross-regionally.
Historic progress
In 2019, our Lesotho-based garment worker partners, their unions, local women’s rights groups, and international worker rights organizations negotiated groundbreaking agreements with major fashion brands and the factory owner, Nien Hsing Textiles, to end rampant violence against women at five factories.
The Lesotho Agreements represent the first instance in which brands and their suppliers entered into binding and enforceable workplace agreements to stop violence against women and men, and protect workers.
Our program in Lesotho went beyond just the bargaining table–we helped our partners craft a code of conduct and establish an independent monitoring system that, at its signing, provided more than 10,000 garment workers with access to a complaint and investigation process that can mandate consequences for perpetrators of violence against workers at Nien Hsing factories, including dismissal.
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Ratification and implementation of Convention 190
Beginning in 2014, we were a key member of a global coalition led by our women workers partners, including global union federations and other worker rights organizations, advocating for a landmark global treaty – Convention 190 (C190) – to eliminate violence and harassment at work, including gender-based violence and harassment.
When ratified, C190 requires governments, employers and workers to come together to develop and implement solutions that will prevent and address these abuses.
The International Labor Organization adopted C190 in June 2019, and we continue to support our partners as they push for ratification by their governments, recognizing the detrimental physical and emotional health implications of violence against women, as well as the value of women in economic development.
Ratify ILO C190: Create A Safe World of Work Free from Violence and Harassment
Violence and harassment in the world of work is a persistent and significant challenge faced by workers worldwide. The ILO Violence and Harassment Convention, 2019 (No. 190) and its accompanying Recommendation (No. 206) clearly spell out the right of everyone to a...
Morocco Textile Workers Achieve Dignity, Worker Rights
Nearly 2,000 workers at textile factories in Casablanca, Morocco, now can receive decent pay, health care protection and a voice on the job after joining the Moroccan Workers' Union (UMT) and the federation of textile workers. “We joined the union primarily to...
Rapport du Commissaire aux Compotes sur les Etats Financiers de L’Exercice Clos le 31 Decembre 2023
Read the full report here.
LOW PAY, NO SUPPORT: Sri Lanka Delivery Drivers Fight for Worker Rights
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL REPORT.
Heat Stress in the Cambodian Workplace
In Cambodia, workers health and safety and climate change are linked. This report details the results of surveys, interviews, and thermal monitoring conducted in the garment, delivery, and informal food sector that display the negative effect that heat has on workers,...
2023 Annual Report
In 2023, the Solidarity Center supported workers as they took on exploitative multinational companies and robot algorithms, demanded their governments tackle social ills and deliver on promises, and fought for justice in environments increasingly dangerous to those...
In Their Own Words: Workers Address Gender-Based Violence & Harassment in South Africa’s Garment Factories and Clothing Retail Stores
In South Africa, 98 percent of women garment and retail workers surveyed in 2022 said they had experienced one or more forms of gender-based violence or harassment, including physical abuse, unwanted sexual advances, psychological abuse, bullying and rape. To better...
In Our Own Words: Workers Address Gender-Based Violence and Harassment in Garment Factories in Bangladesh
In Bangladesh, 80 percent of women garment workers surveyed in 2019 reported they had experienced or witnessed sexual harassment, molestation or assault, endured extreme verbal abuse or witnessed a factory manager or supervisor abuse and harass other women in the...