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Compilation of decisions of the Committee on Freedom of Association

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Collective bargaining15

Recognition of the most representative organizations

  1. The Collective Bargaining Recommendation, 1981 (No. 163), enumerates various means of promoting collective bargaining, including the recognition of representative employers and workers organizations (Paragraph 3(a)).
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
Digest: 2006949
  1. Systems of collective bargaining with exclusive rights for the most representative trade union and those where it is possible for a number of collective agreements to be concluded by a number of trade unions within a company are both compatible with the principles of freedom of association.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
1865Republic of Korea363115
2437United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland3441315
2691Argentina356258
2729Portugal358887
2750France362933
2881Argentina364229
2952Lebanon367878
2971Canada370220
3024Morocco372421
Digest: 2006950
  1. Legislation that sets a threshold for the validation of collective agreements goes against neither Article 4 of Convention No. 98 nor the objective of promoting the broadest possible development and utilization of voluntary collective bargaining procedures, especially if the threshold has been set in consultation with the social partners and if it is not too high.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
2750France362961
  1. In a case where the right to represent all the employees in the sector in question appeared to have been granted to organizations which were representative only to a limited extent at the national level, the Committee considered that, if national legislation establishes machinery for the representation of the occupational interests of a whole category of workers, this representation should normally lie with the organizations which have the largest membership in the category concerned, and the public authorities should refrain from any intervention that might undermine this principle.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
Digest: 2006951
  1. Employers, including governmental authorities in the capacity of employers, should recognize for collective bargaining purposes the organizations representative of the workers employed by them.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
2169Pakistan36088
2169Pakistan35764
2416Morocco3401022
2492Luxembourg348988
2512India348904
2579Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)3501699
2609Guatemala355864
2837Argentina363309
3067Democratic Republic of the Congo376950
Digest: 2006952
  1. Recognition by an employer of the main unions represented in the undertaking, or the most representative of these unions, is the very basis for any procedure for collective bargaining on conditions of employment in the undertaking.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
2169Pakistan36088
2169Pakistan35764
2416Morocco3401022
2492Luxembourg348988
2685Mauritius355907
Digest: 2006953
  1. Employers should recognize for the purposes of collective bargaining organizations that are representative of workers in a particular industry.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
Digest: 2006954
  1. Where difficulties with regard to the interpretation of rules concerning the election of trade union officers create situations where the employers refuse to negotiate with the union concerned and, more in general, to recognize such a union, problems of compatibility with Convention No. 87 arose.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
2096Pakistan343163
Digest: 2006955
  1. The requirement that the employer have at least 21 employees in order for a union to have recourse to the recognition dispute procedure runs contrary to the principle of free and voluntary collective bargaining.
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RELATED COUNTRYBerichtPARAGRAPH
2473United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland349274
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