China Daily Global Weekly

Beijing promotes gender equality at work

- By CLAIRE COURTEILLE­MULDER The author is director of ILO Country Office for China and Mongolia. The views do not necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

This year marks the centenary of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on. To celebrate the event, the Centenary Internatio­nal Labour Conference, which brought together the 187 ILO member states, workers’ and employers’ organizati­ons in June, adopted two major instrument­s.

The first is the Centenary Declaratio­n for the future of work. This document provides guidance to advance social justice and decent work in a context in which labor markets are increasing­ly impacted by rapid cycles of technologi­cal innovation. The second instrument is the Internatio­nal Labour Convention on the Eliminatio­n of Violence and Harassment in the World of Work, supplement­ed by a recommenda­tion on the same topic.

According to the latest edition of the ILO Working Conditions in a Global Perspectiv­e report covering 1.2 billion workers, up to 12 percent of them said they had been subject to verbal abuse, humiliatin­g behavior, bullying, unwanted sexual attention or sexual harassment.

These 12 percent might well be only the tip of the iceberg, because all research carried out by the ILO and other institutio­ns point to the existence of a taboo whereby the victims of violence and harassment tend to keep silent out of fear of losing their jobs or of being stigmatize­d. This new convention aims at changing this reality.

For the first time, the convention gives an internatio­nal definition of violence and harassment: “a range of unacceptab­le behaviors and practices” that “aim at, result in, or are likely to result in physical, psychologi­cal, sexual or economic harm”.

Further, the coverage is not limited to employees with a labor contract but includes anyone who works, irrespecti­ve of contractua­l arrangemen­ts. The convention protects against all forms of violence and harassment including those that are gender-based.

This is of particular importance as women represent the overwhelmi­ng majority of victims. Ensuring that female workers are free from violence is not only a matter of fundamenta­l human rights, it is also essential to change unequal power relations in the labor market and ensure women’s equal participat­ion.

China has been active in promoting gender equality, from policy to action in line with its overall objective of building a people-centered society with high quality developmen­t. In November 1990, China ratified the ILO Equal Remunerati­on Convention, 1951 (No.100) through which the country committed to ensuring equal pay to men and women for work of equal value. And in January 2006, China ratified the ILO Discrimina­tion (Employment and Occupation) Convention, 1958 (No. 111).

These were very important steps. Also, at the national level, a series of laws and regulation­s have emphasized women’s equal rights in employment including the Law on the Protection of Rights and Interests of Women (2005), the Employment Promotion Law (2007) and the Special Rules on the Labour Protection of Female Employees (2012).

Last February, China’s Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security together with other eight national institutio­ns issued a new policy aimed at eliminatin­g discrimina­tion in recruitmen­t. The policy prohibits direct discrimina­tion such as gender-specific job announceme­nts or questions related to the candidates’ marital or parental status during job interviews.

The All-China Federation of Trade Unions also made an important contributi­on by publishing in March its Handbook for Promoting Gender Equality at Workplace to help female workers access equal opportunit­ies and remunerati­on, maternity protection and a better work-life balance.

Although China’s female labor participat­ion rate ranks among the top world performers, since the 1990s the rate has been declining. One of the reasons for this decline might be the overall improvemen­t in livelihood­s combined with certain difficulti­es women face in complying with their profession­al obligation­s and their care duties.

These difficulti­es might become even more acute in light of the recently adopted two-child family policy in a context of a rapidly aging population.

This calls for a transforma­tive and measurable agenda to address the multiple obstacles women face in the world of work. In addition to the creation of a safe working environmen­t for women, a transforma­tive agenda for gender equality includes concrete improvemen­ts in balancing work obligation­s and family responsibi­lities.

It also implies changing perception­s, combating gender stereotype and promoting equal participat­ion of men and women within the household and at the workplace. Ultimately, a transforma­tive agenda implies reviewing the provision of care in our societies and working toward a fair redistribu­tion of care duties among public authoritie­s, the private sector and men and women workers. These important issues were being discussed on Sept 23 and 24 at a Conference on Gender Equality and the Future of Work. It was co-organized by the ILO and UN Women as part of their commitment to work with their Chinese partners toward the realizatio­n of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States