Last Updated: Tuesday, 10 January 2017, 15:00 GMT

International Labour Organization (ILO)

The International Labour Organization is the UN specialized agency which seeks the promotion of social justice and internationally recognized human and labour rights. It was founded in 1919 and is the only surviving major creation of the Treaty of Versailles which brought the League of Nations into being and it became the first specialized agency of the UN in 1946. The ILO formulates international labour standards in the form of Conventions and Recommendations setting minimum standards of basic labour rights: freedom of association, the right to organize, collective bargaining, abolition of forced labour, equality of opportunity and treatment, and other standards regulating conditions across the entire spectrum of work related issues. Website: www.ilo.org/
Selected filters: Trafficking in persons
Filter:
Showing 1-6 of 6 results
Profits and Poverty: The Economics of Forced Labour

2014 | Publisher: International Labour Organization (ILO) | Document type: Thematic Reports

Training Manual to Fight Trafficking in Children for Labour, Sexual and Other Forms of Exploitation. Textbook 2: Action against child trafficking at policy and outreach levels

September 2009 | Publisher: International Labour Organization (ILO) | Document type: Training Manuals

Training Manual to Fight Trafficking in Children for Labour, Sexual and Other Forms of Exploitation. Textbook 3: Matters of process

September 2009 | Publisher: International Labour Organization (ILO) | Document type: Training Manuals

Training Manual to Fight Trafficking in Children for Labour, Sexual and Other Forms of Exploitation. Textbook 1: Understanding child trafficking

September 2009 | Publisher: International Labour Organization (ILO) | Document type: Training Manuals

Give girls a chance. Tackling child labour, a key to the future

June 2009 | Publisher: International Labour Organization (ILO) | Document type: Thematic Reports

Trafficking in Human Beings. New Approaches to Combating the Problem

May 2003 | Publisher: International Labour Organization (ILO) | Document type: Legal Articles/Analyses/Commentaries

Search Refworld