In the field of occupational safety and health, transition and its attendant elements of privatization, industrial restructuring, new forms of work organization, and the breakup of larger state enterprises and the proliferation of small enterprises, has had a direct effect on employment, firm size and industrial relations in Central and Eastern Europe. These in turn have all influenced the way occupational safety and health is considered and solutions are sought.
What is characteristic in Central and Eastern European countries is a common history of a particular system of delivery of occupational health and safety services, administered before transition by the trade unions. This was based mainly on classification and certification of hazardous industries which determined if a worker was entitled to extra pay, early retirement, shorter working hours, and other benefits to counteract the ill-effects of hazardous working conditions.
However, this system is gradually giving way as many countries develop legislation based on the provisions of ILO Conventions and EU Regulations. Many countries are modernizing their labour inspection services to a state system which integrates health and safety responsibilities. The development of a totally different industrial relations system is also having an effect on the way improvements concerning health and safety at work are negotiated. The long tradition of trade union expertise in the area is being joined by employers' associations in tripartite and bipartite decision-making in occupational health and safety.
What's new
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10 February 2012
A €3 million project, with funding by the European Union to improve the employability of the Albanian labour force was launched on 10th of February, 2012 in Tirana, Albania. Implemented by the International Labour Organisation in partnership with relevant ministries and the social partners the project will seek to enhance the capacity of the Labour Inspectorate to assess working conditions, introduce health and safety legislation in line with EU law and close the existing gap between the skills demanded by the market and those taught through vocational education and training.