Governing Body 323rd Session, Geneva, March 2015

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INTERNATIONAL LABOUR OFFICE Governing Body 323rd Session, Geneva, 12 27 March 2015 Legal Issues and International Labour Standards Section Legal Issues Segment GB.323/LILS/2 LILS Date: 29 January 2015 Original: English SECOND ITEM ON THE AGENDA Promotion of the ratification of the 1986 and 1997 Instruments for the Amendment of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation Purpose of the document This document provides information and elements for debate and guidance on the promotion of the ratification of the 1986 and 1997 Instruments for the Amendment of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation. Relevant strategic objective: Cross-cutting. Policy implications: None. Legal implications: None. Financial implications: Subject to the decisions of the Governing Body. Follow-up action required: Promotional activities for the ratification of the 1986 and 1997 Instruments of Amendment. Author unit: Office of the Legal Adviser (JUR). Related documents: GB.292/PV; GB.297/LILS/2; GB.309/PV; GB.312/LILS/1; GB.320/LILS/INF/1 and 2. This GB document is printed in limited numbers to minimize the environmental impact of the ILO's activities and processes, contribute to climate neutrality and improve efficiency. GB members and observers are kindly requested to bring their copies to meetings and to avoid asking for additional ones. All GB documents are available on the Internet at www.ilo.org.

1. This document presents up-to-date information on the process of ratification of the 1986 and 1997 Instruments for the Amendment of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation. It draws on similar documents, the last of which was submitted for information to the Governing Body in March 2014, 1 and provides an update, for the purpose of debate and guidance, on the status of ratifications, promotional efforts and possible future action. Status of ratifications 2. To enter into force, each of the 1986 and 1997 Amendments must be ratified or accepted by two-thirds of ILO member States, including at least five of the ten Members of chief industrial importance. As there are currently 185 member States, each of the Amendments needs to be ratified by 124 of them. 3. As of 15 January 2015, 102 ratifications and acceptances of the 1986 Amendment have been registered, of which two are from Members of chief industrial importance (India and Italy). The last instrument of acceptance (Cambodia) was received in February 2014. A complete list is provided in Appendix I. A further 22 ratifications or acceptances are therefore required for the 1986 Amendment to enter into force. These must include at least three from Members of chief industrial importance (from among Brazil, China, France, Germany, Japan, Russian Federation, United Kingdom and United States). Twenty Governing Body Members have not yet ratified the Amendment. 4. As for the 1997 Amendment, 123 ratifications or acceptances have been registered to date, including seven from Members of chief industrial importance. A complete list is provided in Appendix II. Fourteen Governing Body members have not yet ratified the Amendment. The last instrument of acceptance (Mali) was received in December 2014. As a result, only one ratification is required for the 1997 Amendment to enter into force. Promotional efforts 5. The Office has continued its efforts to promote ratification of the two Instruments of Amendment. It maintains two dedicated web pages, 2 each containing the text of the respective Instrument, an explanatory brochure with questions and answers, a sample format for an Instrument of Ratification or Acceptance, and up-to-date information on ratification. 6. The Office continues to distribute paper copies of the explanatory brochures and to meet with Government delegations with a view to promoting the ratification of both Instruments. It seizes the opportunities afforded by ILO meetings, in particular the International Labour Conference, the Governing Body and the ILO Regional Meetings. In this vein, it held targeted bilateral meetings during the recent 18th American Regional Meeting with the governments of Members that have not yet ratified the 1986 and 1997 Instruments of Amendment. 7. The Office has also been actively involved in promotional activities with new candidate member States, advising them on the ratification of the 1986 and 1997 Instruments of 1 GB.320/LILS/INF/1 and 2. 2 http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/leg/amend/qna1986.htm, http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/leg/news/1997ratification.htm. GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx 1

Amendment through direct contacts and information materials. A recently published brochure on becoming an ILO Member includes a section on the Instruments for the Amendment of the ILO Constitution. 3 The brochure reminds States wishing to become Members of the ILO that they should also consider ratifying or accepting the 1986 and 1997 Instruments of Amendment, and provides all the necessary information for them to do so. Ratification or acceptance by new Members is important as the admission of a new Member has an impact on the two-thirds threshold required for the entry into force of the Amendments. Assessment and possible future action 8. A number of conclusions may be drawn from a closer look at the ratification data outlined above. The tables below show the evolution in ratifications registered by year for the two Amendments. With regard to the 1986 Amendment, a marked decline in ratifications took place from the early 1990s until the launch of the ratification campaign in 2010, 4 which resulted in the registration of nine new ratifications in the following five years. As for the 1997 Amendment, after an initial ratification peak in the three years following its adoption, a diminishing trend was observed over the subsequent five-year period. The ratification process was reactivated with the launch of a ratification campaign in 2005, 5 which produced favourable results over a period of five years (37 new ratifications registered from 2006 to 2010). Figure 1. 1986 Amendment Number of ratifications registered by year (102/124) 3 The brochure may be accessed at: https://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/leg/download/membership_2014.pdf. 4 See GB.312/LILS/1. The Office had previously undertaken efforts to promote ratification, including through letters to Members sent out by the Director-General first in 1986 and subsequently in 1988, in the wake of concerns raised during the 239th Session of the Governing Body regarding the insufficient number of ratifications received. 5 See GB.292/PV, para. 202, and GB.292/10(Rev.). Previous promotional activities had included letters to Members sent out by the Director-General first in 1997 and subsequently in 1998, 2000 and 2002. 2 GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx

Figure 2. 1997 Amendment Number of ratifications registered by year (123/124) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 9. According to the tables, the ratification campaigns appear to have had a positive impact, particularly in the three to five years immediately after their launch. Moreover, promotional experience shows that targeted activities tend to be the most effective in fostering ratification or acceptance. Consequently, ratification campaigns could be relaunched with a focus on targeted activities involving Members that have not ratified an Instrument of Amendment (listed in Appendices I and II). Targeted activities could include, for instance, specific meetings with the permanent missions concerned in Geneva or with visiting government officials, as well as similar initiatives undertaken by standards specialists in the field, and also targeted missions to capital cities. Moreover, promotional activities could further engage the participation and support of social partners. To this end, additional efforts could be undertaken to keep them informed of the ratification campaigns and existing resources and materials, or to facilitate their direct participation in specific promotional events. 10. The Governing Body might also consider inviting Members that have not ratified or accepted one or both of the Instruments of Amendment to provide information on the reasons why they have not yet done so. The Office could analyse the responses received and report back to the Governing Body. This could assist in identifying challenges to ratification and may provide useful elements for improving promotional activities or considering other follow-up measures. Significance of the two Amendments and ratification prospects 11. The 1986 Amendment addresses four main areas. First, the composition and governance of the Governing Body, aiming to make it more representative taking into account the various geographic, economic and social interests of its constituent groups. If the GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx 3

1986 Amendment enters into force, the number of regular Governing Body members will increase from 56 to 112 and there will no longer be seats guaranteed to member States of chief industrial importance. 6 As an interim measure, the 1995 Amendment to the Standing Orders of the International Labour Conference increased the number of seats in the Governing Body by creating the category of deputy members. However, the 1995 reform did not introduce the full range of changes envisaged by the 1986 Amendment; in particular, it did not affect the status of the Members of chief industrial importance. Second, under the 1986 Amendment, the appointment of the Director-General by the Governing Body will have to be submitted to the International Labour Conference for approval. Third, the 1986 Amendment introduces adjustments to the rules for voting at the International Labour Conference, concerning the required majorities and quorum. Fourth, the 1986 Amendment sets out different voting and ratification requirements for constitutional amendments related to specific considerations. Taking into account that almost three decades after its adoption the 1986 Amendment has not yet entered into force, the Governing Body may wish to assess the slow progress and uncertain prospects concerning its entry into force in the near future. 12. The 1997 Amendment is likely to attain the required number of ratifications for its entry into force in the near future. It is recalled that this Amendment will enable the Organization to abrogate obsolete Conventions and, in so doing, reinforce the relevance, impact and coherence of international labour standards. The 1997 Amendment simply consists in adding a new paragraph to article 19 of the Constitution to read: Acting on a proposal of the Governing Body, the Conference may, by a majority of two-thirds of the votes cast by the delegates present, abrogate any Convention adopted in accordance with the provisions of this article if it appears that the Convention has lost its purpose or that it no longer makes a useful contribution to attaining the objectives of the Organisation. 13. As a number of Conventions have become outdated, their maintenance is damaging to the clarity and legibility of the ILO s body of standards. It is essential for the credibility of the Organization that it should have a body of up-to-date standards, thereby concentrating its standard-setting action on the Conventions which currently contribute to the achievement of its objectives. The effect of the abrogation within the meaning of the 1997 Amendment will be to eliminate definitely all legal effects arising out of the Convention between the Organization and its Members. An abrogated Convention will cease to be an ILO Convention. 7 Thus, Members having ratified the Convention will no longer be obliged to submit reports under article 22 of the Constitution, and it will no longer be possible for representations (article 24) and complaints (article 26) to be made against them for nonobservance of such a Convention. 14. The abrogation mechanism set out in the 1997 Amendment may also be relevant in the context of the Governing Body s ongoing discussions on the establishment of a Standards 6 Of the 56 seats reserved for governments, 54 will be distributed among four geographic regions Africa, the Americas, Asia and Europe with a minimum of 12 and a maximum of 15 seats for each region. Distribution of seats will be weighted by taking into account the number of member States within the region, their total population and their economic activity assessed by appropriate criteria (gross national product or contributions to the budget of the Organization). The initial allocation provided for is 13 seats for Africa, 12 for the Americas, 14 for Asia and 15 for Europe. The two remaining seats will rotate, one between Africa and the Americas and the other between Asia and Europe. 7 While an abrogated Convention thus ceases to be an ILO Convention, nothing prevents member States which have ratified it (and which might oppose its abrogation) from considering that they remain bound inter se by its provisions. But they may no longer call on the ILO, on the one hand, to supervise observance and maintain procedural obligations in respect of Conventions which no longer serve its objectives or, on the other hand, to assume the resulting costs. 4 GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx

Review Mechanism. 8 It is recalled that once the 1997 Amendment enters into force, 9 the Governing Body will be able to place an item on the agenda of the Conference concerning the abrogation of a Convention, under the procedural guarantees provided for under article 5.4 of the Standing Orders of the Governing Body. 10 To date, 25 Conventions have been shelved (no longer supervised on a regular basis) and 31 Conventions have been classified as outdated. 11 These Conventions may be the subject of an abrogation exercise once the 1997 Amendment comes into effect. Draft decision 15. The Governing Body: (a) urges ILO Members which have not yet done so to ratify or accept the 1986 and 1997 Instruments for the Amendment of the ILO Constitution; and (b) requests the Director-General to pursue promotional efforts in the light of the guidance provided by the Governing Body for the ratification or acceptance of the two instruments of amendment, and to report at a future session on the basis of results obtained. 8 See GB.312/PV, para. 577. 9 Under article 3 of the amendment and article 36 of the Constitution, the amendment shall take effect as soon as the required number of ratifications is attained. 10 In particular, the decision to place an item on the agenda of the Conference concerning the abrogation of a Convention must, as far as possible, be reached by consensus or, where it is not possible to reach such a consensus in two successive sessions of the Governing Body, by a fourfifths majority of members of the Governing Body with a right to vote during the second of these sessions. 11 http://www.ilo.org/dyn/normlex/en/f?p=1000:12000:4140505011767860::::p12000_instrume NT_SORT:3. GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx 5

Appendix I 1986 Amendment ratification/acceptance status (at 15 January 2015) A. Member States which have ratified/accepted the 1986 Instrument for the Amendment of the ILO Constitution (by region) Africa Algeria Ethiopia Namibia Angola Gabon Niger Benin Ghana Nigeria Botswana Guinea Rwanda Burkina Faso Guinea-Bissau Senegal Burundi Kenya Sierra Leone Cameroon Lesotho South Sudan Chad Libya Sudan Comoros Madagascar Swaziland Congo Malawi Tanzania, United Republic of Côte d Ivoire Mali Togo Congo, Democratic Republic of Mauritania Tunisia Egypt Mauritius Uganda Equatorial Guinea Morocco Zambia Eritrea Mozambique Zimbabwe Americas Argentina Costa Rica Guatemala Barbados Cuba Mexico Chile Ecuador Suriname Colombia Grenada Trinidad and Tobago Europe Austria Iceland San Marino Belarus Italy Serbia Belgium Luxembourg Slovenia Bosnia and Herzegovina Malta Sweden Croatia Montenegro Switzerland Cyprus Netherlands The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Denmark Norway Turkey Finland Poland Ukraine Hungary Asia and the Pacific Romania Bahrain Kuwait Saudi Arabia Bangladesh Malaysia Singapore Cambodia Mongolia Sri Lanka GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx 7

India Myanmar Thailand Indonesia New Zealand United Arab Emirates Iraq Jordan Pakistan Qatar B. Member States which have not yet ratified/accepted the 1986 Instrument for the Amendment of the ILO Constitution (by region) Africa Cabo Verde Gambia Seychelles Central African Republic Liberia Somalia Djibouti Sao Tome and Principe South Africa Americas Antigua and Barbuda El Salvador Peru Bahamas Guyana Saint Kitts and Nevis Belize Haiti Saint Lucia Bolivia, Plurinational State of Honduras Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Brazil Jamaica United States Canada Nicaragua Uruguay Dominica Panama Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Dominican Republic Europe Paraguay Albania Greece Russian Federation Armenia Ireland Slovakia Azerbaijan Israel Spain Bulgaria Kazakhstan Tajikistan Czech Republic Kyrgyzstan Turkmenistan Estonia Latvia United Kingdom France Lithuania Uzbekistan Georgia Germany Asia and the Pacific Afghanistan Moldova, Republic of Portugal Lao People s Democratic Republic Samoa Australia Lebanon Solomon Islands Brunei Darussalam Maldives, Republic of Syrian Arab Republic China Marshall Islands Timor-Leste Fiji Nepal Tuvalu Iran, Islamic Republic of Oman Vanuatu Japan Palau Viet Nam Kiribati Papua New Guinea Yemen Korea, Republic of Philippines 8 GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx

Appendix II 1997 Amendment ratification/acceptance status (at 15 January 2015) A. Member States which have ratified/accepted the 1997 Instrument for the Amendment of the ILO Constitution (by region) Africa Algeria Ethiopia Namibia Benin Guinea Nigeria Botswana Guinea-Bissau Seychelles Burkina Faso Libya South Africa Cabo Verde Malawi South Sudan Cameroon Mali Togo Comoros Mauritania Tunisia Congo Mauritius Zambia Egypt Morocco Zimbabwe Eritrea Mozambique Americas Antigua and Barbuda Dominican Republic Peru Argentina Ecuador Saint Kitts and Nevis Barbados Guatemala Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Brazil Guyana Suriname Canada Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago Chile Mexico Cuba Nicaragua Dominica Panama Europe Albania Hungary Poland Austria Iceland Portugal Azerbaijan Ireland Romania Belgium Israel San Marino Bosnia and Herzegovina Italy Serbia Bulgaria Latvia Slovakia Croatia Lithuania Slovenia Cyprus Luxembourg Spain Czech Republic Malta Sweden Denmark Moldova, Republic of Switzerland Estonia Montenegro Tajikistan Finland Netherlands Turkey France Norway United Kingdom GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx 9

Asia and the Pacific Afghanistan Kuwait Saudi Arabia Australia Lao People s Democratic Republic Singapore Bahrain Lebanon Solomon Islands Bangladesh Malaysia Sri Lanka Brunei Darussalam Mongolia Syrian Arab Republic Cambodia Nepal Thailand China New Zealand United Arab Emirates Fiji Oman Vanuatu India Pakistan Viet Nam Japan Philippines Yemen Jordan Korea, Republic of Qatar Samoa B. Member States which have not yet ratified/accepted the 1997 Instrument for the Amendment of the ILO Constitution (by region) Africa Angola Gambia Senegal Burundi Ghana Sierra Leone Central African Republic Kenya Somalia Chad Lesotho Sudan Côte d Ivoire Liberia Swaziland Congo, Democratic Republic of Madagascar Djibouti Niger Uganda Equatorial Guinea Gabon Americas Rwanda Sao Tome and Principe Bahamas El Salvador Saint Lucia Belize Grenada United States Bolivia, Plurinational State of Haiti Tanzania, United Republic of Uruguay Colombia Honduras Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Costa Rica Europe Paraguay Armenia Kazakhstan Turkmenistan Belarus Kyrgyzstan Ukraine Georgia Russian Federation Uzbekistan Germany Greece The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 10 GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx

Asia and the Pacific Indonesia Maldives, Republic of Papua New Guinea Iran, Islamic Republic of Marshall Islands Timor-Leste Iraq Myanmar Tuvalu Kiribati Palau GB323-LILS_2_[JUR-150109-2]-En.docx 11