Section VI: Regular machinery for supervising the observance of obligations deriving from Conventions and Recommendations (ILS Handbook of Procedures)Description:(ILS Handbook of Procedures) Display the document in: French Spanish Document No. (ilolex): 29200607
Handbook of procedures relating to international labour Conventions and Recommendations VI. Regular machinery for supervising the observance of obligations deriving from Conventions and Recommendations Regular supervisory bodies 54. On the basis of a resolution adopted by the Eighth Session of the International Labour Conference in 1926, the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations and the Conference Committee on the Application of Standards were given responsibility for regular supervision of the observance by member States of their standards-related obligations. A. Committee of ExpertsComposition, terms of reference and working methods (Endnote_1) 55. Members of the Committee are appointed by the Governing Body on the proposal of the Director-General for renewable periods of three years. Appointments are made in a personal capacity among completely impartial persons of technical competence and independent standing. They are drawn from all parts of the world, in order that the Committee may enjoy first-hand experience of different legal, economic and social systems. The Committee's fundamental principles are those of independence, impartiality and objectivity in noting the extent to which the position in each State appears to conform to the terms of the Conventions and the obligations accepted under the ILO Constitution. In this spirit, the Committee is called on to examine: (Endnote_2) (i) the annual reports under article 22 of the Constitution on the measures taken by Members to give effect to the provisions of Conventions to which they are parties, and the information furnished by Members concerning the results of inspection; (ii) the information and reports concerning Conventions and Recommendations communicated by Members in accordance with article 19 of the Constitution; (iii) information and reports on the measures taken by Members in accordance with article 35 of the Constitution. Organization of the Committee's work56. (a) The Committee meets on dates determined by the Governing Body. (Endnote_3) (b) At each session's opening sitting, the Committee holds elections to the Chairperson and the office of the Reporter. (c) The Committee meets in private. Its documents and deliberations are confidential. (d) The United Nations is invited to be represented at appropriate Committee sessions. When the Committee deals with instruments or matters related to the competence of other specialized agencies of the United Nations system, representatives of those agencies may be invited to attend the sitting. (e) The Committee assigns to each of its members initial responsibility for groups of Conventions or subjects. Reports and information received early enough by the Office are forwarded to the member concerned before the session. The member responsible for each group of Conventions or subject may take the initiative of consulting other members, and any other member may ask to be consulted, before the preliminary findings are submitted to the Committee as a whole in the form of draft observations and direct requests. The wording is at this stage at the sole discretion of the member responsible. All the preliminary findings are then considered, for approval, by the Committee as a whole. (f) The Committee appoints working parties to deal with general or especially complex questions, such as General Surveys of reports under articles 19 and 22 of the Constitution. (Endnote_4) Working parties include members with knowledge of different legal, economic and social systems. Their preliminary findings are submitted to the Committee as a whole. (g) Documentation available to the Committee includes the information supplied by governments in their reports (Endnote_5) or in the Conference Committee on the Application of Standards; relevant legislation, collective agreements and court decisions; information supplied by States on the results of inspections; comments of employers' and workers' organizations; reports of other ILO bodies (such as commissions of inquiry or the Governing Body Committee on Freedom of Association) and reports of technical cooperation activities. (h) The Committee has asked the Office, where necessary, to prepare a comparative analysis of the ratifying State's national law and practice vis-à-vis each Convention, which is considered by the member responsible. It has also asked the Office to prepare for the member responsible notes on legal questions necessary for the examination of the information provided. (i) Although the conclusions of the Committee have traditionally represented unanimous agreement among its members, decisions can be taken by a majority. Where that happens, it is the established practice of the Committee to include in its report opinions of dissenting members if they so wish, together with any response of the Committee as a whole. (j) The qualified secretariat which is necessary to the work of the Committee is placed at its disposal by the Director-General of the ILO. (k) The report of the Committee is in the first place submitted to the Governing Body (at its session in March-April) for transmission to the Conference (which usually meets in June each year). (Endnote_6) The final findings take the form of: Part I: (Endnote_7) a general report (giving an overview of the Committee's work and drawing the attention of the Governing Body, the Conference and member States to matters of general interest or special concern); Part II: individual observations on: (Endnote_8) (i) the application of ratified Conventions in member States; (ii) the application of Conventions in non-metropolitan territories for whose international relations member States are responsible; and (iii) the submission of Conventions and Recommendations to the competent national authorities; - a series of direct requests: (Endnote_9) further individual comments addressed to governments by the Director-General of the ILO on behalf of the Committee; - a series of acknowledgements: (Endnote_10) when a government has given a full reply to a direct request asking for further information and there is no need for further comment; Part III: (Endnote_11) a General Survey of national law and practice in regard to the instruments on which reports have been supplied on unratified Conventions and on Recommendations under article 19 of the Constitution. Communication of the comments of the Committee of Experts to governments57. (a) Each year, the requests for reports on ratified Conventions sent to governments in February are accompanied by copies of any relevant comments of the Committee of Experts, including those adopted by the Committee at its session the previous December. (b) The Committee of Experts' report is published in March and immediately sent to governments. (c) Direct requests concerning submission to the competent authorities (as well as observations, which are already published in the report of the Committee) are transmitted together with the Memorandum on submission approved by the Governing Body. (Endnote_12) B. Conference Committee on the Application of StandardsComposition and officers 58. The Committee is set up under article 7 of the Standing Orders. It is tripartite, consisting of representatives of governments, employers and workers. (Endnote_13) The Committee holds elections from among each of the three groups to the Chairperson and two Vice-Chairpersons and to the office of the Reporter. (Endnote_14) Terms of reference (Endnote_15)59. (i) The Committee has to consider: (a) the measures taken by Members to give effect to the provisions of Conventions to which they are parties and the information furnished by Members concerning the results of inspections; (b) the information and reports concerning Conventions and Recommendations communicated by Members in accordance with article 19 of the Constitution; (c) the measures taken by Members in accordance with article 35 of the Constitution. (ii) The Committee has to submit a report to the Conference. Organization of the Committee's work60. Following the independent, technical examination of documentation carried out by the Committee of Experts, the proceedings of the Conference Committee present an opportunity for representatives of governments, employers and workers to meet and review the manner in which States are discharging their obligations under and relating to Conventions and Recommendations. Governments are able to amplify information previously supplied; indicate further measures proposed; draw attention to difficulties met with in the discharge of obligations; and seek guidance as to how to overcome such difficulties. (a) Documents before the Committee. The Committee has to consider Report III (Parts 1A and 1B), which is the report of the Committee of Experts. (Endnote_16) It also takes notice of documents containing the substance of written replies to observations of the Committee of Experts and supplementary information received by the Office since the meeting of the Committee of Experts. (Endnote_17) (b) General discussion. In an opening general discussion, the Committee may review the matters covered by the general part of Report III (Part 1A), of the Committee of Experts' report. It may then discuss the General Survey in Report III (Part 1B). (Endnote_18) (c) Consideration of individual cases (i) The Officers of the Committee prepare a list of observations contained in the Committee of Experts' report, in respect of which they consider it desirable to invite governments to supply information to the Committee. The list is submitted to the Committee for approval. (ii) Governments addressed by the observations in the approved list have a further opportunity to submit written replies, the substance of which will appear in a document for the information of the Committee. The Committee may then decide whether or not it wishes to receive supplementary oral information from a representative of the government concerned. (iii) The Committee invites representatives of the governments concerned to attend one of its sittings to discuss the observations in question. Governments which are not members of the Committee are kept informed of its agenda and the date on which it wishes to hear statements from their representatives through the Conference Daily Bulletin. (iv) Following statements of government representatives, members of the Committee may put questions or make comments, and the Committee may reach conclusions on the case. (v) A summary of governments' statements and the ensuing discussion is reproduced in an appendix to the Committee's report to the Conference. In addition, the Committee includes in the body of its report information on its discussions as to various States' compliance with specific obligations: submission to the competent authorities; failure to comply with reporting obligations; mention of cases of progress, in which the Committee notes changes in law and practice which overcome difficulties previously discussed by it; paragraphs drawing the Conference's attention to discussions of certain special cases; other paragraphs drawing attention to cases discussed previously by the Committee where there has been continued failure over several years to eliminate serious deficiencies in the application of ratified Conventions; communication of copies of reports to employers' and workers' organizations; and participation in the work of the Committee. (d) The report of the Conference Committee is submitted to the Conference and discussed in plenary, which gives delegates a further opportunity to draw attention to particular aspects of the Committee's work. The report is published in the Record of Proceedings of the Conference and separately for circulation to governments. The attention of governments is drawn to any particular points raised by the Committee for their consideration, as well as to the discussions of individual cases, so that due account may be taken in the preparation of subsequent reports.
EndnotesEndnote 1The fundamental principles, terms of reference and working methods of the Committee of Experts are restated in the Committee's report to the 73rd Session of the Conference (1987), Report III (Part 4A), paras. 37-49. Since 1999, the Committee of Experts has undertaken a thorough examination of its working methods. It has paid particular attention to drafting its report in a manner to make it more accessible and draw the attention of a broader readership to the importance of the provisions of Conventions and their practical application. In 2002, the Committee of Experts decided to create a subcommittee with the mandate of examining not only the working methods of the Committee as strictly defined, but also any related subjects. Since 2003, information on the work of the subcommittee have been included in the first part of the General Report of the Committee of Experts (ILC, 91st Session (2003), Report III (Part 1A), General Report, paras. 7-10). Endnote 2These terms of reference are as revised by the Governing Body at its 103rd Session (1947). Endnote 3The meetings are held at the end of Nov.-beginning of Dec. each year. Endnote 4See also paras. 43-52 above. Endnote 5See also para. 46(c) above. Endnote 6The Office posts on the ILO web site the General Report of the Committee of Experts and its observations on the application of Conventions. The entire findings of the Committee of Experts, including direct requests, are accessible via the Internet once they have been sent to the governments. See Appendix II below for basic documentation on Conventions and Recommendations. Endnote 7Parts I and II appear in a single volume, Report III (Part 1A) to the subsequent session of the International Labour Conference. Endnote 8(i) Observations are generally used in more serious or long-standing cases of failure to fulfil obligations. In particularly important cases, the Committee may add a footnote requesting the government to send a detailed report in advance of the date when a report would otherwise be due under the reporting system described in para. 36 above. It may also add a footnote asking the government to supply full particulars to the Conference. (ii) Observations expressing satisfaction are used in cases of progress, where a government has taken the measures called for by earlier comments of the Committee. A list of cases in which the Committee of Experts has been able to express satisfaction or interest is drawn up each year and included in its General Report. Endnote 9The full texts of direct requests do not appear in the report of the Committee of Experts to the Conference. Direct requests are listed after the individual observations for each group of Conventions. They may relate to matters of secondary importance or technical questions, or seek clarification to enable a more full assessment to be made of the effect given to obligations. They may, like observations, include footnotes asking for a detailed report in advance of the date on which it would otherwise be due. Endnote 10Acknowledgements are also listed after the observations for each group of Conventions. Endnote 11This forms a separate volume, Report III (Part 1B). The General Survey also covers information received under article 22 from countries which have ratified the Conventions in question. General Surveys allow the Committee, in addition to reviewing national law and practice in member States, to examine difficulties raised by governments as standing in the way of the application of instruments, clarify their scope and indicate possible means of overcoming obstacles to their implementation. Endnote 12In this respect, see para. 13 above. Endnote 13Any voting is weighted so as to yield equal strength for each group (SO, article 65, and the standing practice of the Conference). Endnote 14SO, article 57. Endnote 15SO, article 7. Endnote 16See para. 56(k) above. Endnote 17In addition, subject to the decision of the Governing Body and the Conference, the Committee has before it a report of the Joint ILO-UNESCO Committee of Experts on the Application of the Recommendation concerning the Status of Teachers. Endnote 18And, as the case may be, the report of the Joint ILO-UNESCO Committee.
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