Publications
March 2003
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Trade Unions and Poverty Alleviation in Africa
12 March 2003
This book is a direct outcome of the regional workshop on 'Poverty Alleviation through Social Dialogue: the Role of Trade Unions in English-speaking African Countries' - Nairobi Kenya, December 2001
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Employers’ activities in the ILO/Danida Programme(Final Evaluation Summary)
05 March 2003
Project INT/01/27/DAN
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Workplace Action on HIV/AIDS - Issue 3, March 2003
01 March 2003
October 2002
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ILOAIDS Newsletter - Issue 2, October 2002
01 October 2002
July 2002
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Nigeria : an assessment of the international labour migration situation : the case of female labour migrants
01 July 2002
GENPROM Working Paper No. 7 - Series on Women and Migration
June 2002
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ILOAIDS Newsletter - Issue 1, June 2002
01 June 2002
May 2002
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South Africa Child Domestic Workers: A National Report
01 May 2002
This national report provides an in-depth analysis of child domestic workers - a widespread worst form of child labour - at the country level.
March 2002
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Africa’s crises : recent analysis of armed conflicts and natural disasters in Africa
01 March 2002
Crisis Response and Reconstruction Working Paper No. 5
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Human traffic human rights: redefining victim protection
01 March 2002
This report looks at measures taken to protect trafficked people in ten different countries: Belgium, Colombia, Italy, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Poland, Thailand, Ukraine, United Kingdom and the United States.
January 2002
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Applying the comprehensive LED approach : the case of Mozambique
01 January 2002
Case Study
December 2001
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Combating trafficking in children for labour exploitation in West and Central Africa: Synthesis report
01 December 2001
November 2001
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Gender Equality in Employment: The Legal Framework in the case of Zimbabwe
22 November 2001
The report examines the content of various pieces of legislation as they address issues of prohibition of gender discrimination; protective laws for women; sexual harassment; maternity protection as well as discrimination on the basis of HIV/AIDS. The report further analyses Zimbabwes position regarding international conventions on gender as well as social attitudes to gender equality. The report ends by drawing conclusions and making important recommendations for legislative improvement.
August 2001
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Wages Through Booms and Recessions - A Case Study of Zimbabwe
16 August 2001
The paper argues that a wage policy must be pillared on decentralised, coordinated and synchronised collective bargaining, in private and public sectors alike. In the public sector, there is no collective bargaining at the moment and that is why wages in that sector sometimes lag behind those of the private sector.
March 2001
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Microfinance in Mozambique - Are Donors Promoting Regional Feminisation of Poverty
14 March 2001
The paper is one of the background documents prepared in the context of the Study on the Feminisation of Poverty in Mozambique that is being executed by the International Labour Organization’s Southern Africa Multidisciplinary Advisory Team (ILO/SAMAT) in Harare, with funding form the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Maputo. The background documents prepared under the project consist of conceptual and empirical reviews of the literature on gender and poverty in Mozambique, an analysis of existing survey data in the country from the perspective of the feminisation of poverty, and a set of case studies on coping mechanisms of poor women. These were discussed at two workshops held in Maputo on 22 February and in Nampula on 26 February 2001
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Female Itinerant Maize Traders in Southern Mozambique: A study of Higher-end Informal Sector Activity and its Potential for Poverty Reduction
14 March 2001
The paper is one of the background documents prepared in the context of the Study on the Feminisation of Poverty in Mozambique that is being executed by the International Labour Organization’s Southern Africa Multidisciplinary Advisory Team (ILO/SAMAT) in Harare, with funding form the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Maputo. The background documents prepared under the project consist of conceptual and empirical reviews of the literature on gender and poverty in Mozambique, an analysis of existing survey data in the country from the perspective of the feminisation of poverty, and a set of case studies on coping mechanisms of poor women. These were discussed at two workshops held in Maputo on 22 February and in Nampula on 26 February 2001.
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Gender and armed conflicts : challenges for decent work, gender equity and peace building agendas and programmes
01 March 2001
Crisis Response and Reconstruction Working Paper No. 2
January 2001
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Coping with Extreme Poverty through Traditional Skills: The Case of Xirungu Basket Makers of Mozambique
23 January 2001
Here was a clear case of feminisation of poverty suffered by a very vulnerable group of Mozambican society – old single women – who were becoming poorer as the demand for their products diminishes and as the safety net features of their society showed serious signs of cracking.
June 2000
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The Impact of Globalization on Local Communities: A Case Study of the Cut-Flower Industry in Zimbabwe
19 June 2000
This study of how Zimbabwe has taken advantage of the opportunity afforded by export diversification examines the positive and negative aspects of flower-growing. While documenting cut-flower exports as an example of a sector that copes successfully with globalization, the study examines many aspects of its social impact, in particular employment, income, and working conditions.
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Enclavity and Constrained Labour Absorptive Capacity in Southern African Economies
19 June 2000
The paper is concerned with the twin questions of why it is that a majority of the labour force in African countries continues to be unemployed or underemployed, and why it is that the response of employment to increases in gross domestic product and investment is low. This is what the author terms the problem of low labour absorptive capacity of African economies.
December 1999
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Sending workers abroad: A manual on policies and procedures of special interest to middle and low income countries
17 December 1999
Examines the institutional and policy implications of alternative assumptions about the role played by the state and the private sector in organizing labour migration. Draws extensively on the experience of states that have sought to manage various stages of foreign employment, from regulating recruitment to insuring that workers take advantage of social security benefits.