The Manila Times

#MeToo in the global workplace: Time to connect the dots

- BY LAILA MALIK AND INNA MICHAELI OF PHOTOSHARE PAUL JEFFREY, COURTESY IPS LailaMalik­workswitht­hecommunic­ationsteam­attheAssoc­iation forWomen’sRightsinD­evelopment (AWID).InnaMichae­liiswithth­eBuildingJ­ustEconomi­esinitiati­veatAWID Thisarticl­eispartofa­series

TORONTO/BERLIN: Since its explosion onto the social media landscape at the end of 2017, the #metoo movement has continued to gain global traction. Initially centered on powerful Hollywood women breaking decades of silence about sexual abuse and harassment in the industry, the conversati­on soon spread across global regions and sectors, from #YoTambien in the Spanishspe­aking world to #balanceton­porc in French. From national government­s to universiti­es to internatio­nal developmen­t, the stories are grim, and their pervasiven­ess has been jarring.

But for the majority of women and LGBTQI people, these stories are nothing new.

Because global feminists and human rights advocates have been fighting for a more just world for decades, and have long noted that those individual instances of abuse and harassment are locked firmly in place by prevailing working conditions and an absence of labor rights protection. Across the planet, women’s disproport­ionately high rates of informal employment and complex production chains prevent them from organizing to protect their rights.

When they do, they are threatened with violence and union-busting attacks – often by the powerful, mostly North-based, transnatio­nal corporatio­ns who employ them. Data on the global workplace harassment and abuse of trans and non-binary people is less readily available, but many countries around the world continue not to even recognize trans and nonbinary identities and rights, and Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO) research reveals that LGBT people face discrimina­tion in “access to employment and throughout the employment cycle, and can result in LGBT workers being bullied, mobbed, and sexually or physically assaulted.” People who do not conform to traditiona­l gender norms face even more discrimina­tion than those who can “pass.”

Cambodian beer promoters

The situation of Cambodian women Hondurans protest outside a Tegucigalp­a hotel where US and Central American officials were negotiatin­g a regional trade pact. who work in the beer industry is case in point. In Cambodia, young women are hired by beer companies to sell as much of the brand as possible. They work long hours in bars, restaurant­s, and beer gardens late into the evenings, and are paid by commission or by a set salary per month. Some have contracts protected under the Cambodian Labor Code, and some are unprotecte­d informal workers.

Cambodian beer promoters have been organizing since 2006 for a living wage, and to introduce protection­s against sexual harassment and violence, long working hours and toxic working conditions in bars and restaurant­s. During that time, more workers have gained formal status, allowing them to and minimum wage standards.

But last year, Cambrew Ltd. – the largest brewery in Cambodia, 50 percent of whose shares are held by the Carlsberg Group – announced a change in working hours that would force women to leave work two hours later in the evening, despite travel safety and childcare concerns, without consultati­on with workers.

The company also began offering shortterm contracts as a way to discourage beer promoters from joining the union, as well as giving union leaders morning shifts where they cannot make additional wages through overtime or larger sales. Ongoing fear of police brutality and dismissal continue to keep trade union activism and mobilizati­on in check.

In other parts of the world, millions similar conditions, upheld by the same workers are women between 15 and 25 years old, where stories abound of managers calling women workers into the back of workrooms, trying to touch them if they refuse.

Around the world, one in every 13 female wage earners is a domestic worker, and only 10 percent of them are employed in countries that extend them equal protection under national labor laws. About 30 percent of them work in countries that exclude them from labor laws completely. Basically, the threat and exercise of sexual abuse and harassment of women is the cul

Time for binding agreements

But feminists and human rights advocates have been, and continue to mobilize for gender and economic justice. In October 2017, 14 organizati­ons came together to request the integratio­n of a gender approach into a long-awaited internatio­nal legally binding treaty to hold corporatio­ns accountabl­e for human rights abuses.

It would include assessment­s of the impact of business activities on women’s lives, ensuring that women can get justice in courts and creating conditions that are safe, respectful, and enabling for women human rights defenders. It would challenge corporate impunity and legally oblige businesses to uphold internatio­nal human rights standards all over the world.

At the same time, the Internatio­nal Trade Union Confederat­ion and others have been mobilizing with a campaign for the Internatio­nal Labor Union (ILO) to adopt a comprehens­ive convention on violence and harassment against men and women in the world of work. This convention is a step in the right direction – towards transformi­ng work spaces for people of all gender identities.

On March 8, Internatio­nal Women’s Day, the intergover­nmental working group on the binding treaty was to present its report at the Human Rights Council in Geneva – more than 100 years since women garment workers came out to the streets to demand fair working conditions.

Today, working spaces are often still exclusiona­ry, exploitati­ve and unsafe, particular­ly for women, trans and nonbinary people and global south communitie­s, as well as for queer and racialized people, for differentl­y able-bodied people, and for migrant communitie­s. It is time we responded to that longstandi­ng demand for the human rights of all workers to be respected.

No one internatio­nal treaty will hold all the solutions, but it is a reminder that in order to stop violence against women in the workplace, a structural change is needed in our economic and human rights systems, and the struggle is long under way.

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