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Observatório Social is a Brazilian initiative by the main Trade Union Confederation (CUT) in collaboration with other institutions, observing companies' behavior towards fundamental work rights. Research focuses on indicators related to labor and social issues, using participatory methodology and open interviews.
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What is OBSERVATÓRIO SOCIAL (Social Observatory) It is an initiative from the main Trade Union Confederation in Brazil (CUT), in cooperation withDIEESE, CEDEC e UNITRABALHO. Our goal is to OBSERVE the behaviour of NATIONAL, MULTINATIONAL companies in regards to the fundamental RIGHTS at work.
The Social Observatory cooperates with the following institutions: FNV-Mondiaal – Netherlands DGB-Bildungswerk - Germany AFL-CIO – USA International Labour Office PSI – Public Services International LO – Norway Hans Böckler Foundation – Germany Oxfam – United Kingdom SASK – Finland
ABN Amro Bank Ahold/Bompreço Akzo Nobel (I e II)BayerBasfBoschCargill (port)EmbratelHonda (port)Light (port)Hartmann-MapolNestlé (port)NokiaNorsk Hydro Some previous reports and studies Aluminium supply chain (to be published) Parmalat Philips LG Philips Santander (port) Sara Lee (port) Shell ThyssenKrupp Unilever (I e II) Wal Mart
DATA BASE COMPANY PROFILE (available only in portuguese) RESEARCH REPORT MAP OF PROBLEMS SOCIAL AND LABOUR BEHAVIOUR PRODUCTS PUBLICITY WEB SITE ARTICLES REPORTS NEWS CLIPPING PUBLICATIONS MAGAZINE CD-ROM’S
REFERENCES AND INDICATORS • Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work (ILO) • Tripartite Declaration of Principles concerning Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy (ILO) • OECD Guidelines to Multinational Enterprises • UN Global Compact • Decent Work Concept • Decent Work Country Programmes • Four dimensions: • Fundamental Rights • Employment • Social Dialogue • Social Protection
REFERENCES AND INDICATORS • Norms were adapted for the evaluation of COMPANIES • We take into consideration the context, the laws, and the practices in Brazil • We elaborated indicators for 9 rights/themes (2 main blocks) • Plus one complementary block regarding Corporate Social Responsibility policies
INDICATORS Block 1:Fundamental Rights • Freedom of association and collective bargaining • Non-discrimination • Abolition of Forced Labour (supply chain) • Abolition of Child Labour (supply chain) Block 2:Work and Employment Conditions • Job creation • Decent wage • Decent working hours • Health and Safety at work • Employment and social protection Complementary block: Engagement, monitoring and transparency of the CSR policies
INDICATORS Example: Freedom of association and collective bargaining – how to measure? • Freedom of a worker to be unionized; • Unions representatives’ access to the company; • Respect to the right to strike; • Recognition of decisions aproved on assemblies; • Access to information about the company for effective negotiations; • Direct negotiations between company and unions
INDICATORS Example: Health and Safety at work – how to measure? • Participation of workers on the elaboration, aplication and monitoring of the mechanisms to improve working conditions; • Existence of clear information about the work environment and the risks to health and safety; • Programs on prevention and protection; • Number of accidents in the last years; • Medical center’s conditions; • Proper treatment of injured or ill workers
RESEARCH PROCEDURE: Participatory Methodology • Company • Trade Union / Confederation • Other representative groups • Monitoring group Documents analysis Workers’ opinion survey • Representative sample • Stratified samples • “Closed” questionnaire • Applied by researchers (or self-applied)
RESEARCH PROCEDURE: Open interviews • Managers • Trade Union Leaders • Members of CIPA (Internal Comission for Accidents Prevention) • Others Focal group – group interviews Report validation • Trade Union • Company Publication of the validated report Negotiation
Controlled 17 companies and 40 locations in Brazil • 2002: • DGB and IGMETTAL visited the Trade Union office and two plants • Contacts with CNM (Brazilian Metalworkers Confederation) and CUT Example: ThyssenKrupp • 2003: • Setting of the research project • Social Observatory Europe Project – Exchange and European campaigns (Germany/ DGB and Netherlands/ FNV) • Negotiation with company management
Example: ThyssenKrupp Research description: • Field research in two plants: Foundry (Barra do Pirai/ RJ) and Elevators factory (Guaiba/ RS) • Sample size: 492 of 1.918 workers • Numbers of managers interviewed: 10 from areas like Health and Safety, Environment, Human Resources, Industrial Relations • Numbers of trade union leaders: 2 one from each city • Group: 6 researchers and 1 statistician • Time: from July 2002 to June 2003 – five months of negotiation • Main difficulty: HR staff close monitoring of workers interviewed
Example: ThyssenKrupp • Main conclusions: • Bad work environment conditions in the foundry plant • Wages below the sectoral average • Germany-Brazil exchange: discussions about the report outcomes between trade unionists and management • Report publication provokes impact and headquarters reaction • Germany HQ management visits the plant • Trade Unions in Brazil develop a Company network (7 unions) • Company headquarters announces investments from 7 million euros for improvement of the work conditions in the foundry factory