Understanding the elimination of child labour and ILO core conventions for effective human rights due diligence
This course explores the fundamental principle and right of Freedom of Association (FoA) and the Right to Collective Bargaining, focusing on how businesses, development finance institutions, state-owned enterprises, and procurement agencies can promote responsible business conduct. It highlights the role of FoA in fostering fair and safe working conditions, enabling workers to organize and negotiate collectively for better terms of employment. Participants will learn about the importance of human rights due diligence (HRDD) in upholding these rights, ensuring that enterprises respect and promote collective bargaining across their operations and supply chains. The course aims to equip stakeholders with the tools and strategies necessary to implement FoA in a way that aligns with global standards and sustainable business practices.
- Enterprises (privately owned or state-owned); - Procurement agencies - Line ministries with a specific mandate and interest in business and human rights (trade and commerce, procurement, justice and human rights); - Development finance institutions; - National human rights institutions; - Academia; - Tripartite appointed national focal points for the promotion of the MNE Declaration and OECD National Contact Points for RBC; - UN agencies; - Employers' organizations and trade unions.
This course provides participants with the essential building blocks related to child labour and responsible business conduct, structured in five modules:
Participants will be able to advise their institutions to further advance responsible business conduct and contribute to more effective HRDD processes related to child labour, including:
The International Training Centre of the ILO (ITCILO) is part of the UN system and is the training arm of the International Labour Organization. The ITCILO is known for innovative learning methods and for being a marketplace for new ideas and innovations
in the world of work.
The course will be offered through the eCampus – the ITCILO learning platform – over a period of 3 weeks from 16 September to 4 October 2024, for an estimated total of 32 learning hours.
As part of your participation, you will develop a specific HRDD component related to child labour (risk assessment, capacity building plan, intervention and remedial mechanisms, etc.) relevant to the product/service, sector and/or location of your choice.
At the end of the learning journey, participants receive a Certificate of Participation.
Please apply by 10 September 2024 via the following link:https://oarf2.itcilo.org/STF/A9717092/en
Partial scholarships are available for qualifying candidates and will be allocated on a rolling basis. Therefore, we encourage interested candidates to apply as early as possible.