Critical Review of International Governance: An Occasional Series

New Foundation or New Facade? The ILO and the 2008 Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization

Abstract

The 2008 Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization was the first attempt since the end of World War II to reformulate the ILO's message. The strain placed on the ILO's core normative functions by globalization made it indispensable. The object of the Declaration is thus first to restate the ILO's mandate and objectives to highlight their relevance to the current context. This message contains three major innovations: a strategic, proactive presentation of the mission around four core objectives; the affirmation of the inseparability of those objectives; and the strengthening of the status of the fundamental principles and rights at work <it>vis-à-vis trade</it> liberalization. In addition, and unlike the post-World War II Declaration of Philadelphia, the 2008 Declaration introduces various procedural innovations to translate these approaches into concrete action by the ILO and its members, and increase the Organization's influence on relevant non-state actors. For the Declaration's potential to be realized, the ILO's analytical capacity must be strengthened, requiring a reshuffling of priorities or additional resources. The current crisis may help achieve this otherwise unlikely prospect.

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