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FAO-ILO-IUF

Agricultural Workers and their Contribution
to Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development

 

Written by: Peter Hurst
in collaboration with Paola Termine and Marilee Karl

 

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
International Labour Organization (ILO)
International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations (IUF)

October 2005

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CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

FOREWORD

Sustainable agriculture and rural development, food security, and sustainable development

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

PART I: WAGED AGRICULTURAL WORKERS

WHO ARE THEY?

Full-time permanent workers

Casual, temporary and seasonal workers

Migrant workers

Indigenous rural workers

Lack of standardization of definitions of categories of workers

Wage-dependent small farmers

Developing links between waged agricultural workers and small farmers

Child labourers in agriculture

Hazardous child labour

Child labour and sustainable agriculture and food security

Young workers

The “employment relationship”

WHY FOCUS ON WAGED AGRICULTURAL WORKERS?

Key points

WORKERS AND THEIR TRADE UNIONS IN AGRICULTURE AND THE FOOD INDUSTRY/FOOD CHAIN

National level

International and regional levels

Union organization in transnational corporations in agriculture and along the food chain

Levels of trade union organization in agriculture

PART II: ELEMENTS OF SUSTAINABILITY

THE AGRICULTURAL LABOUR MARKET AND ITS CHANGING NATURE

Trends in waged employment, wages and poverty

Waged employment

Women and waged employment

Casualization

Underemployment/unemployment/hidden unemployment

Sustainable agriculture and labour markets

Wages

Factors affecting wages

Agricultural growth

Food prices and food security

Labour supply

Non-farm employment

Minimum wages

Poverty among waged workers and sustainability

CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT AND WORK

Labour law and international standards

Promoting rights at work

Collective bargaining and the right to organize

What is collective bargaining?

To what extent is collective bargaining an important element in improving working conditions in agriculture?

Which labour standards support the right to bargain collectively?

Contracts of employment

Contract labour and labour contractors

Hours of work

Housing and living conditions

Transport of workers

Occupational health, safety and environment

Labour inspection

The HIV and AIDS epidemic

Households

Farms/production units

Workforce

The FAO Response to HIV/AIDS

Health and sustainable agriculture

The size of the problem

Gender and medical or health care

Medical/health care on plantations

Hygiene provision and welfare services

Social security schemes and benefits

PART III: THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF WAGED AGRICULTURAL WORKERS TO SARD, WORLD FOOD SECURITY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

Key Points - How trade unions can contribute to sustainable agricultural production, food security and sustainable development

Framework agreements between trade unions and multinational enterprises

Supply chains in agriculture, codes of conduct, fair trade labelling and ethical trading initiatives

Codes of conduct

Agricultural examples – IUF and cut flowers

Ethical Trading Initiative

Fair-Trade

Workers promote Integrated Production and Pest Management

Introducing proper pesticide management practices for greater productivity and sustainable agriculture - occupational health and safety project

Worker-pesticides industry joint training on occupational health, safety and environment

Tripartite cooperation to develop roving safety representatives in agriculture schemes

South Africa

UK

Environmentally sustainable development

Food safety and food security

Food safety

FAO Food Safety and Quality Standards

Food security

The FAO and Food Security

The Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development Initiative

World Food Summit and follow-up

Elimination of child labour

National level

Sectoral level

HIV/AIDS prevention

Land reform

FAO Study on Waged Agricultural Workers and Land Reform in South Africa

Building links between trade unions and agricultural producers’ organizations

Understanding changing employment patterns in agriculture

Unions and Informalization of Agriculture

Developing alliances between indigenous and tribal peoples and trade unions

Rural and migrant workers

Labour contractors

Water security, pollution and management

Organic agriculture

Literacy campaigns

Savings and credit cooperatives

CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

APPENDICES

Abbreviations

ILO International Symposium on Decent Work in Agriculture

REFERENCES