ABSTRACT

This book answers the question of how to maintain effective labour regulation as the market for labour moves towards globalization. This issue is addressed from legal, economic, social and cultural perspectives. The authors consider the effects of free trade and investment, with and without labour standards, on employment, competitiveness, wages and working conditions in the global economy. Deriving and analysing policy options, they seek ways in which principles of labour regulation can operate at an international level. The work concludes with a call for a rule-based global trading system in which core labour standards play a significant part.

part |82 pages

Part I The Emerging Global Labour Market

chapter |37 pages

1 The Emerging Global Labour Market

Myth or reality?

chapter |30 pages

2 The New Global Assembly Line

Winners and losers

chapter |13 pages

3 Regulating The Global Labour Market

The effectiveness of the ILO and the WTO

part |39 pages

Part II International Regulation Of Goods, Services and Labour

chapter |16 pages

5 Converging Objectives

Regulating international trade and the global labour market

part |71 pages

Part III Fairness in the Global Labour Market

part |25 pages

Part IV Conclusions