The economic mandate of the “misnamed”Footnote 1 International Labour Organization (ILO) has long been “othered”Footnote 2 internationally. The ILO's 1944 constitutional annex, the Declaration of Philadelphia, confirms the ILO's “responsibility … to examine and consider all international economic and financial policies and measures in the light of th[e] fundamental objective” of lasting peace on the basis of social justice.Footnote 3 After 1945, through decolonization, and prior to the emergence of a Washington consensus-based neoliberal globalization, the ILO enabled some states to mediate the “social” in economic regulation—that is, to adopt free trade economic liberalism promoted transnationally with social redistribution addressed domestically, also referred to as embedded liberalism.Footnote 4 States established and harmonized international labor standards through multilateral processes steeped in an organizational tripartism that made workers’ and employers’ representatives ILO institutional actors alongside governments. At least in the global North, the ILO fostered a high degree of normative convergence nationally, regionally, and on shop floors. For the first Director-General, Albert Thomas, the ILO “taught the world to speak something like the same language on social questions.”Footnote 5 Its approach has been nuanced, pragmatic, and transnational, taking leadership on issues like social protection that should also have been—but were not—the focus of other international economic institutions.
In the troubling contemporary moment of “emancipated hatred,”Footnote 6 precisely when the ILO stares down the predominance of informal labor markets, grapples with perilous mass labor migration, confronts topics that disproportionately affect gendered, racialized workers on the marginsFootnote 7—in short, as it more visibly engages with labor law as developmentFootnote 8—the social justice-focused, embedded liberalism fostered by the ILO emerges as an aberration in a longer history of unfreedom.Footnote 9 This realization calls for founding narratives to be reconsidered, to pay closer attention to how the governance level for labor has been misframed. It also calls for institutional courage to name alternatives for the ILO's next century. Rather than cower in the face of rising nationalism and fascism, the ILO needs to cultivate transnational futures of international labor lawFootnote 10 that are emancipatory.
International Labor Law and Transnational Social Policy
C. Wilfred Jenks, the international legal scholar who would become the ILO's sixth Director-General near the end of his lengthy career at the ILO, sought to build international social policy into the emerging postwar legal architecture. His writings and engagements complicated dichotomies between the domestic and the transnational, emphasizing “economic interdependence and the fuller recognition of its implications.”Footnote 11
Jenks's capacious vision may be glimpsed in the Havana Charter that would have led to an International Trade Organization (ITO), in which transnational governance was located at the interface between labor and trade. Unemployment and underemployment were not matters of domestic concern alone, and a premium was placed on “concerted action on the part of governments and international organizations.”Footnote 12 In Article 7 of the Havana Charter, all countries were understood to have a “common interest” in achieving “fair” labor standards, promoting productivity, and improving wages and working conditions. Members were expected to engage in “appropriate and feasible” action to eliminate unfair labor conditions, both through cooperation with the ILO, and, as necessary, through the invocation of the ITO's own nullification and impairment provisions. As in Jenks's vision, cooperation would be indispensable, and would emerge from “regular exchange of information and views” among them. As ILO membership changed dramatically with decolonization, Jenks moved to reframe the “dogma of sovereignty” as Eurocentric. He called for engagement with the ideas of intellectual and political leaders from Jawaharlal Nehru to Kwame Nkrumah, Habib Bourguiba to W.E.B. du Bois.Footnote 13
However, the ILO's transnational social justice vision came with internal critiques. While the ILO's fifth Director-General, former U.S. acting secretary of labor David Morse, acknowledged the emergence of tripartite transnational cooperation in his acceptance of the ILO's Nobel Peace Prize in 1969, he also acknowledged the ILO's responsibility for an “economic progress which has … benefited only a small sector of the population.”Footnote 14 He specifically named the problem of transplanting a vision of social development to the global South that was rooted in the institutions and assumptions of the global North.
Jenks's transnationalism also encountered trenchant external criticism. While Jenks encouraged “countries wishing to attract private capital from abroad” to support an international charter assuring investor protections,Footnote 15 the leading international law and Third World Approaches to International Law scholar, Georges Abi-Saab, named the “hypothetical reciprocity” of investor protection.Footnote 16 While Jenks sought to build into international labor law a “legal framework of post-colonial policy” anchored on the Indigenous and Tribal Populations Convention, 1957 (No. 107) as a response to the “attainment of national independence by multi-racial and other mixed communities,”Footnote 17 Abi-Saab challenged the irony of rejecting the “legal shield” of newly independent states’ “long struggle for emancipation.”Footnote 18 Philip Jessup affirmed that the “line between the internal and the transnational is rather thin,”Footnote 19 referenced both industrial strike action and colonial attitudes in his book, and acknowledged both the significance of territory and the need to root transnational claims less in sovereignty than in jurisdiction. But it is Abi Saab's critique of the malleability of jurisdiction that focused attention on how colonial histories remain deeply intertwined with any emancipatory reconstructions.Footnote 20
Misframing Labor to Exclude the Transnational
It is by focusing on the margins of labor law that the tendency to misframe labor concerns as naturally, necessarily domestic governance matters becomes particularly. Three examples help to elucidate this point: the erasure of slavery in the history of international labor law; the governance mismatch between the movement of persons and the movement of goods; and the conflation of trade protectionism and social protection.
First, historian Eric Williams's pathbreaking work is rarely referenced in international labor law or its interface with trade. Yet its core insight situates the centuries long legal institution of transnational slavery and the slave trade at the heart of the development of capitalism and the Industrial Revolution.Footnote 21 The plantation economy is increasingly recognized as the pioneer of the division of labor.Footnote 22
At some level, the early ILO understood this link. Director General Albert Thomas even petitioned delegates of the League of Nations in an unsuccessful bid to claim the ILO's constitutional competence to address slavery, within its jurisdiction over conditions of work.Footnote 23 Also echoing the pan-Africanist intellectual titan who should have been recognized as the father of modern sociology in the United States, W.E.B. Du Bois, Thomas wrote that “there will be no true protection of labour if we do not concern ourselves with the conditions of Black labour.”Footnote 24 Rather than follow DuBois's vision, however, the ILO entangled itself in a vision of “native” labor that was shaped by colonial administrators. Its normative oeuvre took it away from the thick understanding of legacies of racialized unfreedom that were understood within emancipatory social movements.Footnote 25
To envision the second issue, conjure two images. One is an iconic symbol of an orderly, liberalized transnational trade: a ship filled with steel containers securely transporting goods across deep waters. Alongside it, conjure the image of perilously overcrowded boats, transporting desperate migrants, all too often to their deaths. These contrasting images capture much of the anxiety and discontent of the present era. The ILO's Constitution declares that labor is not a commodity, but the images suggest something far grimmer—that migrants receive less favorable treatment than commodities.
Jurisdictionally, migration is framed as a matter of domestic law, even though transnational mobility was the norm until late into the last century.Footnote 26 As human beings risk their lives to move across borders and sell their labor under particularly inhumane conditions, they disrupt legal orders through the exercise of human agency in the face of deep-seated inequality, both within and between states.Footnote 27 Emancipatory transnational futures require deepened international solidarity, including by the ILO, on reasonable labor market access.Footnote 28
Third, in March 2017 at a G-20 meeting of finance ministers, the current U.S. administration forced an ill-fated shift toward “protectionism.” Then German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble tried unsuccessfully to downplay it, stating: “It's completely clear we are not for protectionism. But it wasn't clear what one or another meant by that.”Footnote 29 Schäuble's statement encapsulates a quandary. Trade protectionism tends to be conflated with social protection, raising different legitimacy concerns: states’ exercise of comparative advantage, non-protectionist respect for the fundamental principles and rights at work, the extension of social protection to all workers, full employment policies, and adjustment costs for the “losers” of trade.Footnote 30 The U.S. Central American and Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) panel report involving Guatemala—the first final report issued by an arbitral panel interpreting a labor clause in a free trade agreement in the twenty-five-year history of such clauses—embodies this mismatch.Footnote 31
The case focused on labor violations involving workers at a major port that handles exports destined for the United States, and companies that export primary commodities—coffee and textile manufacturing—emblematic of North-South trade. The U.S. trade representative decided not to adjudicate the allegations of murder of trade unionists invoked in the original submission.Footnote 32 The panel gave the language in Article 16.2(1)(a) of the CAFTA-DR, “in a manner affecting trade,” a particularly exacting interpretation, requiring the conferral of a competitive advantage on an employer or employers engaged in trade between the parties.Footnote 33 It did not rely on international labor law. The mismatch is particularly evident in the panel's failure to recognize how a labor chapter, replete with references to fundamental principles and rights at work, would be relevant to the interpretation of CAFTA-DR's overall objectives, in particular Article 1.2's reference to “promot[ing] conditions of fair competition in the free trade area.” The inclusion of a labor chapter in the agreement should confirm that labor is not a mere trade “add on.” It should have resulted in enhanced interpretative space for alternative normative prioritizations—such as a commitment to fundamental international labor standards—to be respected and even enhanced through trade. Instead, the case illustrates that a “social dimensions” approach to labor in trade needs to be rethought, in favor of a “social regionalism”Footnote 34 that takes the transnational seriously, understands labor law as development, and builds distributive justice into the terms of trade.
Reimagining Transnational Futures
The three examples described above illustrate the flaws in the assumption that labor law is somehow naturally and exclusively a domestic regulatory matter. Envisioning the transnational futures of international labor law invites us to consider “present futures,”Footnote 35 that is, historically-rooted engagements with the future of work and workers that acknowledge the weight of the past on our present and that reconsider the political misframing of labor as to be addressed solely within the Westphalian state, rather than at the level that best befits the analysis. Sometimes, readjustment is necessary.
Readjustment might be glimpsed through the document meant to guide future ILO action, the 2019 Centenary Declaration for the Future of Work. It was a laborious document to negotiate, and bears traces of tripartite discord in this moment of discontent. Unlike the avant garde references to non-discrimination in the Declaration of Philadelphia, the ILO Centenary Declaration—which is not annexed to the ILO constitution—does not even mention racial discrimination. That said, it calls on all ILO constituents “to reaffirm their unwavering commitment and to reinvigorate their efforts to achieve social justice and universal and lasting peace to which they agreed in 1919 and 1944,” recommits to full employment, engages with labor migration, and underlines the significance of promoting multilateralism in the future of work.Footnote 36 In this moment of discontent, the ILO will need more than these lofty phrases to pry open space to refocus international social policy.
The ILO will need to leverage its constitutional mandate to claim an overdue space alongside other international institutions to unsettle inequalities and build emancipatory, transnational futures for international labor law. The ILO has shown that it is able to act in targeted, timely ways to facilitate the emergence of alternative mediations of the social in the economic. Two emerging, counterhegemonic transnational legal ordersFootnote 37 in international labor law are noteworthy. The first fosters preferential trade access to country-wide textile industries in a number of small, open economies of the global South, to engender continuous improvement in labor standards via Better Factories – Better Work programs.Footnote 38 It relies on the ILO's dialogic or convenor functionFootnote 39 to influence labor law reform and strengthen labor compliance. The initiative may well force the ILO to tackle the thorny but unavoidable issue of living wages in this highly competitive and volatile sector, following the precedent of the pathbreaking ILO work on wages in the maritime industry. By providing space for tripartite exchange among the mostly small open economies in country-wide labor monitoring programs to negotiate the framework for sectoral living wages, the ILO would offer a pivotal and pragmatic transnational governance alternative.
The second possibility operationalizes international labor law in distinctly transnational ways. Domestic workers offer a counterintuitive example. These workers face historical marginalization and workplace isolation despite their prevalence in global migration. However, they organized and have sought law reform locally, regionally, and then transnationally, alongside a range of global union federations, transnational NGOs, and other civil society organizations in a distinctly fluid approach to tripartism. Together, they successfully lobbied the ILO to adopt new international labor standards, which they immediately drew upon to seek further constitutional and labor law reform and to unsettle societal practices of inequality that directly affect them. Remarkably, with ILO technical support, there has not only been some backlash, but also some significant change. The ILO is positioned to sustain this change through its transnational learning community on decent work for domestic workers.Footnote 40
Conclusion
If the ILO's vision has been othered internationally, this essay attests to ways in which the ILO has unwittingly sustained other exclusions and margins. By looking back, as ILO officials did for the fiftieth anniversary Nobel Peace Prize, it is possible to rethink the past misframings to mitigate the risk that a neoliberal globalization will advance on the divided terrain of inequality between and across states. The ILO has contributed an increasingly fluid tripartite model of engagement for the social mediation of the economic. Into its next century, it must have the courage to address persisting forms of unfreedom that were sidelined from its inception, and reimagine labor law as development, to foster transnational futures of international labor law that are emancipatory.