Resources on Mechanical and electrical engineering sector

  1. Sustainable supply chains to build forward better

    07 June 2021

    Advancing decent work in five global supply chains of key importance to the European Union for a fair, resilient, and sustainable COVID-19 crisis recovery

  2. Sustainable supply chains to build forward better – Project linked to electronics manufacturing in Viet Nam

    01 January 2021

  3. From Waste to Jobs: Decent work challenges and opportunities in the management of e-waste in India

    16 December 2019

  4. The electronics industry in Indonesia and its integration into global supply chains

    10 December 2019

  5. The ILO and the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security (MOHRSS) join forces to strengthen the labour dimension of corporate social responsibility in China

    24 October 2019

    Delegates enthusiastically engage on issues around labour standards, Chinese labour law and CSR during a three-day training

  6. Skills shortages and labour migration in the field of information and communication technology in India, Indonesia and Thailand

    11 June 2019

  7. China to benefit from responsible business conduct in supply chains

    05 March 2019

    Delegates to a technical seminar on CSR in the electronics and textiles sectors discuss challenges and practices.

  8. Women in STEM Workforce Readiness and Development Programme

    01 September 2017

    The programme seeks to provide women with critical soft and technical STEM-related skills, employability and leadership training coupled with targeted mentorship to help women gain quality employment and advancement opportunities in STEM-related jobs.

  9. How technology is changing jobs and enterprises (Series of six reports)

    06 July 2016

  10. The global impact of e-waste: Addressing the challenge

    20 December 2012

    This paper explores the volumes, sources and flows of e-waste, the risks it poses to e-waste workers and the environment, occupational safety and health issues, labour issues and regulatory frameworks, and links this growing global problem with the International Labour Organization’s current and future work.