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The
union agenda goes global
World
trade, finance, technology and the growing domination of mega-corporations
have transformed global labour markets. National solutions are no longer
enough to halt the ‘race to the bottom’ - the scouring of the world
for the most exploitable workers and the lowest conditions - or to
organise and dialogue in the world’s biggest companies. The union agenda
has gone global.
$1,900bn a day flow around the foreign exchange markets. Companies can
outsource work down the street or across the globe - and dump thousands of
jobs to raise their share price. Governments have become clients of their
biggest companies - pushing flexibility for business and preferring
private to public. Industries are increasingly dominated by a handful of
multinational companies, often with bigger economies than the countries
they deal with.
UNI’s response is a global agenda to put a human face on globalisation.
It’s an agenda based on global organising, on ensuring worker and union
rights, on decent work and on building alliances among unions in
multinational companies. We want a world of affordable health care and
truly equal opportunity. A world where people come first.
UNI is the global union for skills and services with 15 million members
worldwide. We bring together 1,000 unions to create a truly global union
that can tackle multinationals and promote the interests of workers to
governments, regional institutions and global agencies.
To win we have to be stronger - together.
We
campaign to help women organise their future at work - in both the formal
and informal economies - and we have a global network of youth activists.
We help empower unions in developing countries and spotlight abuses
wherever they occur around the globe.
Our
aim is to make union members, global players.
Global
organising
The
rights to join a union, to bargain collectively and freedom from
discrimination are cornerstones of global labour rights agreed by
governments, employers and unions at the International Labour
Organisation. Union membership gives you a voice and strength whether you
are full time or part time, staff member or freelance. Ensuring those
rights involves global organising and global monitoring.
UNI has launched global alliances and virtual committees in key
multinationals to bring together unions involved with these companies
around the world to improve union organisation. The aim is to sign global
agreements with multinationals, committing them to respect labour rights
wherever they operate, to open the door to organising and to monitor their
behaviour.
UNI has already signed a handful of these agreements and signing up
more global and regional companies to labour standards is a key priority.
UNI
has launched organising initiatives to stimulate the recruitment of young
workers in the new economy (an increasing number of them women), to create
democratic unions where there were none before - and to help organise
workers in countries receiving outsourced work. We hold global organising
events in the world’s fast growing customer contact industry.
Global
unions for global industries
UNI sectors have become global unions across increasingly global
industries - commerce, finance, post, telecom, IBITS (industry, business
and IT), graphical, property services, media and entertainment, casinos,
electricity, hair & beauty, social insurance and welfare, tourism.
Their task is to build new alliances, to set higher standards and respond
to the growing power of multinationals.
They give national unions a global edge.
Organising
for decent work
Decent work is the global target of the ILO and global unions. It means
changing the current face of globalisation to provide global access to
decent work, fair income, equality, job security, social protection, the
opportunity to develop at work - and the freedom to organise, bargain and
dialogue.
Offshoring sends jobs around the world by fibre optic cable. UNI has an
Offshoring Charter to help unions in both outsourcing and insourcing
countries to win job security and decent work. We have a Call Centre
Charter to raise standards in this key new industry.
Global pressures mean a big increase in migration - and UNI is working to
ensure that workers on the move find the union support they need with our
UNI Passport scheme.
Campaigning
in the regions
UNI has
four active regions that are major players on their own continents. They
work closely with UNI unions to ensure a social dimension to growing
regional economic integration and to influence institutions like the
European Union, Mercosur, ASEAN and the African Union.
Setting
global standards
Corporate scandals have rocked the
USA
and
Europe
, made thousands jobless and damaged economic growth. The greed of top
executives has created a huge pay gap with other employees. Good behaviour
by multinationals is vital, given their growing power and increasing
dominance of market sectors worldwide.
There are guidelines for the behaviour of big companies - promoted by
organisations like the ILO, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development and the United Nations’ Global Compact. Global agreements
between UNI and multinationals help ensure that a company which behaves
well at home also behaves well overseas.
For agreements and guidelines to be effective, unions need to cooperate
globally.
UNI has launched a global campaign to organise workers in Wal-Mart - the
world’s biggest retailer that is anti-union in its
US
homeland and is driving down pay and conditions.
Global
solidarity
UNI is building an effective global network of unions.UNI Development
helps grow unions in emerging economies to ensure workers everywhere
benefit from collective organisation and bargaining.
UNI Online provides Internet access to unions on all four continents to
bridge the digital divide and strengthen the UNI network.
We have a solidarity department that responds to calls for help within 24
hours.
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"UNI
is your global union. We campaign with unions and their members to
challenge a globalising economy."
"Imagine
a world of jobs, justice and decent work."
Philip
Jennings, UNI General Secretary |

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