HIV/AIDS and the World of Work - ILO
Response
ILO’s primary goal is to promote opportunities for women and men to obtain decent and productive
work in conditions of freedom, equity, security and human dignity.
Decent work sums up the aspirations of people in their working lives
for opportunity, decent income, rights, voice and recognition. HIV/AIDS
threatens this decent work.
HIV/AIDS has its primary impact on the world of work with deeper
implications on the labour force, its composition, size and quality.
Over 90% of people with HIV are adults in their productive prime
- workers, employers, managers in all sectors. The ILO estimates
that in ten to fifteen years time the labour force of high prevalence
countries will be 10 to 34% smaller.
HIV/AIDS is a development problem (especially in Sub Saharan Africa)
and a threat to the ILO goal of promotion of decent and productive
work for women and men. ILO interventions in Sub-Saharan Africa
are therefore undertaken against a background of massive human and
material loss.
HIV/AIDS impacts the most vulnerable groups in society, exacerbating
existing problems of poverty and inadequate social protection, gender
inequalities and fuelling stigma and discrimination. Women and children
are particularly vulnerable as they also carry the greatest share
of the burden of care, often forcing the children out of school
into highly exploitative and extremely hazardous child labour.
Why
HIV/AIDS is a workplace issue
HIV/AIDS is a workplace issue not only because it affects labour
and productivity, but also because the workplace has a vital role
to play in the wider struggles to limit the spread and effects of
the epidemic. HIV/AIDS threatens the livelihoods of many workers
and those who depend on them - families, communities and enterprises.
In doing so, it also weakens national economies. Discrimination
and stigmatization against women and men with HIV threaten fundamental
principles and rights at work, and undermine efforts for prevention
and care. The workplace is where workers come together, where information
messages can be shared and policies, regulations, and training adapted
to include HIV and AIDS.
The social and labour dimensions of HIV and AIDS have thus challenged
the ILO to seek innovative interventions in the global struggle
against the devastation of this pandemic.
The ILO scaled up response in the struggle against HIV/AIDS follows
the call of the Platform of Action on HIV/AIDS in the Context of
the World of Work in Africa, mooted by the Regional Tripartite workshop
organized by ILO and UNAIDS in Windhoek, Namibia, in October 1999
and endorsed, in December 1999, by African Ministers of Labour in
Abidjan.
The Platform of Action recognizes the gravity of the pandemic and
categorizes HIV/AIDS as:
- The most serious social, labour and humanitarian challenge
that is currently threatening every African country’s economy;
- A developmental crisis, causing discrimination in employment
and the social exclusion of People Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWHA),
and
- A scourge that brings additional distortion to gender inequalities,
and increases the numbers of orphans and incidences of child labour
and advocates for a social vaccine that promotes social inclusion,
solidarity, and income and job security.
The pandemic has also added a significant burden on the already
strained economies in most of the sub region particularly adversely
affecting the capacity of governments to deliver social services
including health and education.
In cooperation with its tripartite partners- governments, employers’
and workers’ organisations- the ILO has several key entry
points for interventions to mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS on the
world of work including.
- Advocacy for gender sensitive policy development and action
at the workplace
- HIV/AIDS prevention through information, education and awareness
for behaviour change,
- The protection of workers’ rights and social protection
including employment protection, gender equality and upholding
the principles of non-discrimination on the basis of one’s
or perceived HIV status.
HIV/AIDS
and the ILO Decent Work Agenda
The ILO Decent Work Agenda provides an excellent basis for coherent
and focused policies in mitigating the impact of HIV/AIDS. The ILO
Decent Work Agenda also provides for an ethical and legal framework
to guide workplace policies and programmes and to protect the rights
of workers against violation of basic human rights including stigmatisation
and discrimination against PLWHA; discrimination in employment and
occupation; child labour and gender inequality.
The agenda provides a framework action against HIV/AIDS to lessen
the negative impact on both the formal and informal employment sectors
and planning for social and economic consequences of HIV/AIDS. It
also provides a common framework for ILO tripartite constituents
to take action against HIV/AIDS. th
- takes a rights-based approach
- is the result of tripartite consensus
- balances the rights and responsibilities of workers and employers
and
- expressed in ten key principles focused on non-discrimination,
protection of rights and prevention
Key
Principles of the ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the World
of Work
- Recognition of HIV/AIDS as a workplace issue;
- Non-discrimination;
- Gender equality;
- Healthy work environment;
- Dialogue between employers, workers and government, including
workers with HIV;
- No screening for purposes of exclusion from employment
or work processes;
- Confidentiality;
- Continuation of employment relationship for employees
with HIV/AIDS;
- Importance of prevention; and
- Need for care and support, including access to services
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Core
ILO policy documents
- The ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS
- Implementing the ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the world
of work: an education and training manual
Focus
of the ILO Programme on HIV/AIDS and the World of Work in the Sub
Region
The activities of the Sub-Regional Office in Harare are aimed
at:
- Improving knowledge and understanding of the consequences of
HIV and AIDS on the economy, the labour force, and society;
- Advocacy and raising awareness regarding the socio-economic
impact of HIV/AIDS and its implications for workers’rights;
- Through the ILO Code of practice on HIV and AIDS and the world
of work providing setting standards and providing guidelines for
instruments and regulations that guide national action against
HIV/ AIDS and protect human rights infringement based on HIV and
AIDS
- Strengthening the capacity of employers’ and workers’
organizations, and mobilizing resources for education and prevention,
counselling and support, and action against discrimination, and
- Applying the expertise of the ILO’s specialists in sectoral
and technical co-operation programmes to particular workplace
needs, especially in training, social security, safety and health
at work, the gender dimension and HIV/AIDS.
The ILO/AIDS website: http://www.ilo.org/aids
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