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         International Labour Organization:     more books (100)
  1. Tripartism and the International Labour Organization (Studies in international law) by Abdul-Karim Tikriti, 1982-06
  2. Globalization and Informal Jobs in Developing Countries: A Joint Study of the International Labour Office and the Secretariat of the World Trade Organization
  3. International Labour Organization: Its Work for Social and Economic Progress by George Alexander Johnston, 1970-09-24
  4. History of the International Labour Organization by Antony Evelyn Alcock, 1971-07-01
  5. International Labour Organization Tripartite Technical Meeting for the Woodworking Industries: Training of Managers and Workers in the Woodworking Industries 2nd by International Labour Office, 1974-10
  6. International Labour Organization Technical Conference on the Public Service, 1975: Procedures for Determining Conditions of Employment in the Public Service by International Labour Office, 1975-03
  7. International Labour Organization Inland Transport Committee - 10th Session, 1980: Working Conditions in Rail Transport (Report) by International Labour Office, 1979-06
  8. A Guide to Indigenous Peoples' Rights in the International Labour Organization by Fergus MacKay, 2003-11
  9. International labour conventions and recommendations 1977-1995, volume III. by International Labour Organization, 1996
  10. International labour conventions and recommendations 1952-1976, volume II. by International Labour Organization, 1996
  11. International labour conventions and recommendations 1919-1951, volume I. by International Labour Organization, 1996
  12. The Ukrainian Challenge: Reforming Labour Market and Social Policy (Central European University Press Book) by ILO-CEET (International Labour Organization - Central and Eastern European Team), 1995-09-07
  13. Maritime Labour Conventions and Recommendations (including standards relating to fishing, dock work and inland navigation) by International Labour Organization, 1998-04-01
  14. The International Labour Organization and the Quest for Social Justice 1919-2009 by Gerry Rodgers, Eddy Lee, et all 2009-04-30

1. International Labour Organization - Nobel Symposia
international labour organization – nobel Symposia. Video At the nobelCentennial Symposia, held Dec. 6, 2001, in Oslo, Norway, Juan
http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1969/labour-symp.html
Video
At the Nobel Centennial Symposia , held Dec. 6, 2001, in Oslo, Norway, Juan Somavia, Director General, ILO, made this comment.
Comment
(13 min.) Webcasting: Frekvens Produktion AB
Internet Infrastructure Partner: Cisco Systems In order to see the video you need Real Player The Nobel Peace Prize 1969
Presentation Speech
International Labour Organization ...
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The 1969 Prize in:
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Economic Sciences
Find a Laureate: Last modified November 28, 2002 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

2. International Labour Organization - Nobel Lecture
international labour organization – nobel Lecture. nobel Lecture*,December 11, 1969. ILO and the Social Infrastructure of Peace.
http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1969/labour-lecture.html
Nobel Lecture , December 11, 1969
ILO and the Social Infrastructure of Peace
"Universal and lasting peace can be established only if it is based upon social justice." This statement, which opens the preamble to the ILO's constitution, clearly and unmistakably places on the ILO a major role in the maintenance of peace. It shows that the founders of our organization in 1919 were convinced that there was an essential link between social justice within countries and international peace, and that this link was so strong and significant as to make it indispensable that an organization to deal with labor matters should be set up as an integral part of the new institutional framework for the promotion and protection of world peace after the First World War. The founders of the ILO had good reason indeed to hold this belief. For the century which preceded the establishment of the ILO had been one of profound economic and social change in Europe which had played a large part in bringing about the war that Europe had just passed through. Industrialization had in particular led to an unprecedented growth of the economic power of European nations and to increasingly fierce competition between them, a competition which soon had an impact on the political plane and, ultimately, contributed to the outbreak of war. It had also led to serious social tensions within nations. By the end of this century a large industrial working class had become an organized, vociferous, and in many cases revolutionary force in society, often in open conflict with the established order.

3. International Labour Organization Winner Of The 1969 Nobel Prize In Peace
international labour organization, a nobel Peace Laureate, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. international labour organization (ILO).
http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/1969a.html
I NTERNATIONAL L ABOUR O RGANIZATION (I.L.O.)
1969 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Background
    Location: Geneva
Book Store Featured Internet Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

4. Index Of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES. Name, Year Awarded. internationalCommittee Of The Red Cross, 1963. international labour organization, 1969.
http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES
Name Year Awarded Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Annan, Kofi ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

5. ILO's Nobel Peace Prize Lectures - International Institute For Labour Studies
international labour organization (international Institute for labourStudies)This page is ..ILO's nobel Peace Prize Lectures.
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inst/papers/sopolecs/deakin.htm
International Institute for Labour Studies ILO's Nobel Peace Prize Lectures
Central European University, Budapest, 27-30 November 2001
Simon Deakin
Robert Monks Professor of Corporate Governance,
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Renewing Labour Market Institutions
SYNOPSIS Lecture 1: The futures of the contract of employment Lecture 2: The reorganization of work: regulatory responses Lecture 3: Corporate governance: a post-stakeholder world? Lecture 4: The work-life balance: reconceptualising career pathways and capabilities ... Lecture 5: Globalisation and regulatory competition: re-inventing the rules of the game Lecture 1: The futures of the contract of employment The contract of employment heads the list of those labour market institutions whose continued usefulness is called into question by what appear to be fundamental changes in the world of work. However, given the multiple tasks of classification, regulation and redistribution which it has historically been called on to perform, it is the durability of the contract of employment, rather than its supposed ineffectiveness, which requires explanation. From an evolutionary perspective, the employment contract is best understood as a governance mechanism which links together work organisation with labour supply in such a way as to make it possible to manage long-term economic risks. This first lecture set out a number of possible futures for the employment contract as a mechanism for risk management, and identified 'mutations' within the conceptual framework of employment law which suggest possible directions of change.

6. Press Release (ILO/01/45): Nobel Laureate Calls For Decent Work, Basic Labour Ri
GENEVA (ILO News) The nobel economics laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz of political andeconomic leaders to back the international labour organization (ILO) goals
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inf/pr/2001/45.htm
Communication Press Release: Index Nobel Laureate Calls for Decent Work,
Basic Labour Rights Friday 2 November 2001
( ILO/01/45 ) GENEVA (ILO News) - The Nobel economics laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz of Columbia University today urged world political and economic leaders to back the International Labour Organization (ILO) goals of "decent work, full employment and better working conditions" and said development requires "basic labour rights." Speaking on the second day of a three-day Global Employment Forum at the ILO, Professor Stiglitz argued in his keynote address that current international policies often fail to take account of the human value of labour, instead treating it as a commodity. "Equitable, sustainable and democratic development requires basic labour rights, including freedom of association and collective bargaining," he said. The Forum has drawn some 700 world political and economic leaders here to discuss the theme of " Creating Decent Work in the 21 st Century " and address what ILO Director-General Juan Somavia has called the "biggest threats to human security affecting the largest number of people - rising unemployment and poverty." At the opening session Thursday, Mr. Somavia and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan endorsed a new Global Agenda for Employment being considered by the Forum. The Agenda is designed to combat both long- and short-term employment challenges, including the job losses and poverty expected to result from the current recession and economic fallout of September 11.

7. International Labour Organization - ILO Tackles Social Consequences Of Globaliza
The international labour organization (ILO) recently launched a toplevel commissioncomprising Presidents, politicians, academics, social experts and a nobel
http://www.ilocarib.org.tt/news/2002/social_consequences.htm
RETURN TO NEWS ILO TACKLES SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF GLOBALIZATION The International Labour Organization (ILO) recently launched a top-level commission comprising Presidents, politicians, academics, social experts and a Nobel Economics laureate which, for the first time, will address the social dimension of globalization. It was formally launched on Wednesday 27th February 2002. The World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization will be led by two Heads of State, Finnish President Tarja Halonen and President Benjamin Mkapa of Tanzania. Its ultimate goal is to use the process of globalization as a resource to reduce poverty and unemployment, to foster growth and sustainable development, said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia at a news conference. "The Commission is an unprecedented effort to promote international dialogue on ideas to make globalization more inclusive, at a time when the debate is dominated more by polemics and preconceptions than by facts. " Juan Somavia, who was recently invited to address both the Porto Alegre Social Forum and Davos in New York, added that "the time for consensus-building and new thinking around these difficult issues has arrived." "For some, globalization has been an instrument for progress. It has created wealth, expanded opportunities and provided a nurturing environment for entrepreneurship and enterprise. But for others, it has exacerbated inequalities and insecurity. They fear that the risks are too great, the benefits too small", Mr. Somavia said.

8. UN Agency International Labour Organization
adblogo The international labour organization (ILO) is a specialized agency of theUnited Nations efforts were recognized by the award of the nobel Peace prize
http://www.un.org.ph/agencies/ilo.html

9. International Labour Organization
Founded in 1919 and a recipient of the nobel Peace Prize, the international LabourOrganization (ILO) 4, route des Morillons CH 1211 Geneva 22 Switzerland Tel
http://www.un.org/Pubs/ourlives/ilo.htm
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION Did you know that...
    • The total number of work-related accidents each year has grown to an estimated 125 million worldwide, and millions of workers are seriously injured in workplace accidents or poisoned by agro-chemicals.
    • The number of working children worldwide aged between 5 and 14 years of age is 250 million, of whom at least 120 million are working full time and are involved in hazardous and exploitative work.
    • Although only about 164 million of the world's estimated workforce of 1.3 billion belong to trade unions, in most countries, trade unions have managed to consolidate their strength in core sectors, enlist constituents in emerging sectors and develop new collective bargaining strategies, often on a global scale.
    • Occupational segregation by sex is not only detrimental for women, but is also a major source of economic inefficiency. And it is not always bad for women and good for men it can be bad for both.
    • Some 800 million people around the world are members of cooperative business enterprises, while a further 100 million are employed by cooperatives.
Helping migrant workers The ILO endeavours to find remedies to such typical situations through projects to combat discrimination against migrants, improve immigration policies and help labour-sending countries to better check abuses in recruitment.

10. Nobel Peace Prize 2001
Oslo, 12 October, 2001 . The nobel Peace Prize awarded to UN System Laureates 2001United Nations (UN), Kofi Annan. 1969 international labour organization (ILO).
http://www.un.org/depts/dhl/nobel/
Other titles on the
Nobel Peace Prize
from UNBISnet
UN resources

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For more information
point at book covers with your mouse The Nobel Peace Prize 2001
"The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 2001, in two equal portions, to the United Nations (U.N.) and to its Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, for their work for a better organized and more peaceful world. For one hundred years, the Norwegian Nobel Committee has sought to strengthen organized cooperation between states. The end of the cold war has at last made it possible for the U.N. to perform more fully the part it was originally intended to play. Today the organization is at the forefront of efforts to achieve peace and security in the world, and of the international mobilization aimed at meeting the world's economic, social and environmental challenges.
Kofi Annan has devoted almost his entire working life to the U.N. As Secretary-General, he has been pre-eminent in bringing new life to the organization. While clearly underlining the U.N.'s traditional responsibility for peace and security, he has also emphasized its obligations with regard to human rights. He has risen to such new challenges as HIV/AIDS and international terrorism, and brought about more efficient utilization of the U.N.'s modest resources. In an organization that can hardly become more than its members permit, he has made clear that sovereignty can not be a shield behind which member states conceal their violations.

11. International Labour Organization
Introduction The international labour organization ( ILO ) is an international organizationwhich has anniversary, the ILO was awarded the nobel Peace Prize
http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/librarydevelop/ilob.html
International Labour Organization (ILO)
Research Guide
By Charlotte Bynum, Cornell Law Library February 1, 1998 Introduction : The International Labour Organization ("ILO") is an international organization which has a long history of improving working conditions and promoting social justice and human rights. Indeed, in 1969, on its 50th anniversary, the ILO was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize . The ILO's website , located at http://www.ilo.org/ , provides both general information about the organization and original documentation for scholars. The Cornell Law Library will soon be providing a North American ILO mirror site at this location.
History: To address the problems caused by the widespread industrialization of Europe in the 19th century, Robert Owen of Wales, and Jerome Blanqui and Daniel Legrand of France, among others, brought to international prominence the need for international cooperation in setting labor standards. The reasons articulated for cooperation were both benevolent and economic. Cooperation was necessary to eradicate poverty and injustice, not just to protect workers, but to prevent social unrest these conditions could engender. Furthermore, these problems must be addressed at the international level, because each nation acting individually would be at a competitive disadvantage if it imposed higher standards unilaterally. Ultimately, these ideas led to the formation of The International Labour Organization, which came into existence on April 11, 1919 as an affiliated agency of the League of Nations. (1) The original ILO Constitution was drafted as

12. International Cooperative Information Center: The International Labour Organizat
Introduction 1. The international labour organization was set up in 1919 tobring In 1969 the organization and was awarded the nobel Peace Prize.
http://www.wisc.edu/uwcc/icic/orgs/copac/member/ilo/ilo-text.html
The International Labour Organization (ILO)

13. The Norwegian Nobel Institute
The Norwegian nobel Institute Library, opened to the public in European Union, theCouncil of Europe, the international labour organization, the international
http://www.nobel.no/eng_ins_lib.html

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program Library ... Staff The Norwegian Nobel Institute Library Address: Drammensveien 19, NO-0255 Oslo, Norway Phone : Fax : E-mail library@nobel.no Search the library's database Opening hours: Sept.15 - May 14 : 8:00 A.M. - 3:45 P.M. May 15 - Sept.14 : 8:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. Saturdays closed. Home Other Nobel Prizes The Norwegian Nobel Institute Drammensveien 19, NO-0255 OSLO +47 22 12 93 00 tel +47 22 12 93 10 fax The Official Web Site of the Norwegian Nobel Institute

14. Det Norske Nobelinstitutt - Biblioteket
Spesialbibliotek innen områdene politisk historie, folkerett, fredssak og internasjonal økonomi.Category World Norsk Bibliotek Fag- og forskningsbibliotek...... 47) 22 12 93 10 Email library@nobel.no Søk fra FN, EU, international Court ofJustice, Folkeforbundet, international labour organization, Europarådet, Gatt
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Bibliotek Nobels Fredssenter ... Publikasjoner Nobelinstituttets bibliotek Adresse: Drammensveien 19, NO-0255 Oslo, Norway Telefon : Fax : E-mail library@nobel.no 15. sept. - 14. mai: 8:00 - 15:45 15. mai - 14. sept.: 8:00 - 15:00 Nobelinstituttets bibliotek er et spesialbibliotek innen områdene politisk historie fra 1800, folkerett, fredssak og internasjonal økonomi, og er depotbibliotek for publikasjoner fra FN, EU, International Court of Justice, Folkeforbundet, International Labour Organization, Europarådet, Gatt, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, International Monetary Fund, International Finance Corporation, World Trade Organization, International Maritime Organization, OECD, OSCE og Efta. Våre samlinger er åpne for publikum, vi har en lesesal, og de fleste publikasjonene kan lånes med hjem. Tidskriftartikler blir registrert i vår katalog, dvs. at man får informasjon om både artikler og bøker ved emne-, ord- eller forfattersøking i katalogen. Vanlig lånetid er 4 uker, med anledning til fornyelse. Fotokopier leveres.

15. David A. Morse Papers: Series I, International Labour Organisation Files, Subser
nobel Peace Prize 20 Years Ago, the nobel Peace Prize organization for EuropeanEconomic Cooperation, Presentation of Portrait to international labour Office,
http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/finding_aids/morse/ser1sub1
Box/Folder Listing: Series 1, International Labour Organisation Files
Subseries 1, Papers Box Folder Description Date(s) "Action of the ILO: Problems and Prospects" "Activities of the ILO: 1970" "Albert Thomas: 1878-1978" Algeria "The Amazing I.L.O." American Arbitration Association - International Labour Organisation Collaboration Andean Indian Project Argentina Auriol, Vincent Bevin, Ernest Biography of Morse Blamont, Philippe Bolivia Brazil Budget for 1965 Bulgaria Bustamante, Jose L. Castberg, Johan Ceylon China Colombia Congo Constitution Constitutional Issues Cox, Robert W. Criticism of International Labour Organisation Curtis, Thomas B. "David Morse and His Global Skill-Building Program" "David Morse et l'Art" DesRochers, Hermance "Development of the I.L.O. during Mr. Morse's Terms of Office as Director-General" Discrimination in Employment Drug Abuse Eastern European Staff Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East Egypt Election of Morse as Director-General: Congratulations Election of Morse as Director-General: Congratulations Election of Morse as Director-General: Congratulations Election of Morse as Director-General: Congratulations Election of Morse as Director-General: Governing Body Election of Morse as Director-General: Governing Body Election of Morse as Director-General: Governing Body Election of Morse as Director-General: Governing Body Election of Morse as Director-General: News Clippings

16. Nobel Peace Prizes
nobel Peace Prizes. international Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) 1966 1967 -1968 R. Cassin (France) 1969 ILO (international labour organization) 1970 NE
http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_frieden_e.html
Nobel Peace Prizes
(List, not checked)
H. Dunant (Switzerland)
F. Passy (France)
E. Ducommun (Switzerland)
A. Gobat (Switzerland)
Sir W. R. Cremer (United Kingdom)
Institute of International Law, Geneva
Bertha v. Suttner (Austria)
Th. Roosevelt (USA)
E. T. Moneta (Italy)
L. Renault (France)
K. P. Arnoldson (Sweden)
F. Bajer (Denmark)
A.M.E. Beernaert (Belgium)
Baron P. H. B. d'Estournelles de Constant (France)
International Bureau of Peace, Bern
T. M. C. Asser (Netherlands)
A. H. Fried (Austria)
E. Root (USA)
H. La Fontaine (Belgium)
International Committee of the Red Cross
W. Wilson (USA)
L. Bourgeois (France)
K. H. Branting (Sweden)
Chr. L. Lange (Norway)
F. Nansen (Norway)
Sir A. Chamberlain (United Kingdom)
Ch. G. Dawes (USA)
A. Briand (France)
G. Stresemann (Germany)
F. Buisson (France)
L. Quidde (Germany)
F. B. Kellog (USA)
(Sweden)
Jane Addams (USA)
N.M. Butler (USA)
Sir N. Angell (United Kingdom)
A. Henderson (United Kingdom)
C. v. Ossietzky (Germany)
C. de Saavedra Lamas (Argentina)
Lord Cecil of Chelwood (United Kingdom)
International Nansen Office for Refugees, Geneva

17. The International Labour Organization In Its Second Century
In 1969, the ILO won the nobel Peace Prize workers and to this end, freely promoterespect for relevant international labour organization conventions, including
http://www.geocities.com/charnovitz/planck.htm
The International Labour Organization in its Second Century Steve Charnovitz I. Introduction In April 1998, at the annual meeting of the American Society of International Law, a plenary panel held a discussion regarding non-state actors in international law. After one panelist alluded to the experience of the International Labour Organization (ILO), Jessica Tuchman Mathews, President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and also a panelist, responded by declaring that the ILO "has indeed been around forever, but it also has done nothing forever, so it is not terribly interesting". The few ILO hands in the hall were shocked. How could someone so knowledgeable about global affairs make such a preposterous statement? Without a doubt, the ILO has achieved a great deal. Founded in 1919 as part of the Treaty of Versailles, the ILO was one of the earliest multilateral organizations and the first permanent organization to draft treaties on a regular basis. It was also the first intergovernmental organization to provide for full participation by non-governmental organizations (NGOs) which, alongside government representatives, have voting rights in the ILO (in what is known as "tripartism", government, worker, and employer representatives exercise an equal role in the ILO). As of March 2000, the ILO had crafted 182 labor treaties (called conventions) and 190 non-binding Recommendations covering a broad range of subjects. The labor laws of every country have been influenced to some extent by the ILO.

18. International Page
international labour organization (ILO) Geneva (Switzerland) - Organisation internationaledu Travail (OIT nobel Peace Prize (The Norwegian nobel Committee
http://www.mpichard.ca/internat.htm
The International Page
  • International organizations International trade and diplomacy (embassies, consulates and other missions worldwide) Governmental sites
Automatic Fahrenheit - Celsius / Celsius-Fahrenheit Conversion Conversions - enter a number in either field, then click outside the text box
Temperature F: C: International organizations

19. Untitled Document
newly formed United Nations organization. On its 50th anniversary in 1969, it wasawarded the nobel Peace Prize. The first international labour Conference was
http://www.ilo.ru/about/ilo.htm
HOME ABOUT ILO International Labour
Organization ILO Moscow Office About ILO Policies and Programmes International Labour Standards Technical Cooperation
Training, Education, Research, Publishing
... ILO Member States
The International Labour Office is headed by a Director-General
appointed by the Governing Body. Since 1919, the ILO has been led by:
Albert Thomas of France (1919-1932),
Harold Butler of the United Kingdom (1932-1938),
John Winant of the United States (1939-1941),
Edward Phelan of Ireland (1941-1948),
David Morse of the United States (1948-1970),
Wilfred Jenks of the United Kingdom (1970-1973), Francis Blanchard of France (1973-1989), Michel Hansenne of Belgium (1989-1999), and since March 1999 by Juan Somavia of Chile. Juan Somavia INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION "The failure of any nation to adopt humane conditions of labour is an obstacle in the way of other nations which desire to improve the conditions in their own countries."

20. Nobel Prizes
report in alphabetic order; if you click upon a name you will be connected withrelative page of nobel Prizes Archive. international labour organization, 1969.
http://web.tiscali.it/no-redirect-tiscali/LG_WebPace/nobel.htm

Nobel Prize Archive
Nobel Prizes on-line Museum
A LFRED N OBEL
founder of the Nobel Prizes. October 21, 1833-December 10, 1896
Place of birth: Stockholm, Sweden The Nobel Prize Internet Archive is fully interactive. If you have an interesting and useful Internet link about a particular Nobel Laureate, you can add your link instantly to that laureate's home page here at the Archive. What Nobel e-Museum Offers
Nobel e-Museum offers information on all 736 Prize Winners to date, the Nobel Organization, Alfred Nobel, and Nobel events, as well as educational material and games. Nobel e-Museum consists of more than 9,000 static documents, several databases and a number of multimedia productions with Nobel Prize connection.
Here is Nobel Prizes report in alphabetic order; if you click upon a name you will be connected with relative page of Nobel Prizes Archive.
Name Year Awarded Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Annan, Kofi ... MEDECINS SANS FRONTIERES (showcase) (U.S. Site)

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