Everyday transgressions: domestic workers' transnational challenge to international labor law
"This book theorizes the law of the household workplace, and how ongoing multilevel regulatory innovation regarding domestic work can be fostered"--
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"This book theorizes the law of the household workplace, and how ongoing multilevel regulatory innovation regarding domestic work can be fostered"--
In: International labour review, Band 159, Heft 4, S. 591-613
ISSN: 1564-913X
AbstractThis article historicizes social regionalism as a principled and pragmatic response to the breakdown of the embedded liberal bargain and the encasing of an international economic order that was designed to prevent, transnationally, the governance of the social in the economic. Seen in historical context, the first labour chapter Arbitral Panel report under the Dominican Republic–Central America–United States Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA–DR) illustrates the need to shift focus to social regionalism. The latter enables trade treaty interpretation to focus on shared objectives. It moves beyond treaty interpretation, to promote redistributive mechanisms and also international solidarity within trade agreements.
In: International labour review, Band 159, Heft 4, S. 455-462
ISSN: 1564-913X
AbstractThis Special Issue on transnational labour law is placed in the context of the ILO centenary and the challenge of achieving the objective of decent work in a new century, under distinct transnational pressures. The author argues that international labour law, as the normative core of transnational labour law, can play a crucial role – in conjunction with a wide range of actors and the ILO in its standard‐setting and convenor capacities – in addressing this challenge and in reshaping the transnational legal architecture.
In: Canadian journal of law and society: Revue canadienne de droit et société, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 111-114
ISSN: 1911-0227
In: Canadian journal of law and society: Revue canadienne de droit et société, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 281-289
ISSN: 1911-0227
In: International labour review, Band 159, Heft 4, S. 615-616
ISSN: 1564-913X
In: International labour review, Band 158, Heft 1, S. 37-61
ISSN: 1564-913X
AbstractThe authors offer a contextualized analysis of judicial decisions rendered during 1971–2013 in Côte d'Ivoire, where domestic work is regulated by a general labour code. Assessments of those decisions, alongside qualitative interviews of institutional actors, elucidate how innovative practices were mainly derived from the code by attentive inspectors and by jurisprudence evolving to treat domestic work like any other. Yet limitations emanating from the inability to grapple with the specificity of domestic work are also identified. Reaffirming that the regulation of domestic work must embrace its duality (work like any other and work like no other), the authors conclude with a call for an international community of learning on decent work for domestic workers.
In: Ius comparatum - global studies in comparative law volume 34