A 22 Million Dollar Grant Addresses Labor Law Enforcement in Five Countries

The Department of Labor (DOL) just awarded $22 million in grants to improve labor law enforcement efforts and prevent forced labor around the globe.

The U.S. DOL announced on January 27, 2020 the award of $22 million in new grant funding to address labor laws. The funding is meant to promote labor law enforcement and help end exploitative labor practices in at least five trade partner countries.

More specifically, the funding will support projects to combat abusive labor practices, including the use of child labor, forced labor and human trafficking. New technical assistance will also support trade partners’ compliance with the labor requirements of U.S. trade agreements.

The allocation of the funding will be broken down as follows:

  • $5 million to the International Labor Organization (ILO) to strengthen the capacity of governments in Kenya and one other country in Sub-Saharan Africa to address child labor, forced labor and violations of acceptable conditions of work, as well as strengthen assistance services for victims of child labor and forced labor;
  • $5 million to World Vision Inc. to strengthen the capacity of government in the Philippines and one other country in Asia to address child labor, forced labor and violations of acceptable conditions of work, as well as strengthen assistance services for victims of child labor and forced labor;
  • $5 million to Pact Inc. to economically empower vulnerable women and girls in cut-flowers and unrefined brown sugar (panela) supply chains in Colombia;
  • $4 million to Corporación Escuela Nacional Sindical (ENS) to increase the ability of Colombian workers in the palm oil, sugar, mining, ports and cut-flowers sectors to better understand and be able to exercise their labor rights through assistance from worker-driven labor law enforcement centers and trainings; and
  • $3 million to the ILO to increase the impact of rigorous research on forced labor in the garment sectors in Argentina and Mauritius.

In addition to the new funds, an additional $5 million will extend existing grants, including $3.5 million to the ILO/IFC Better Work program for projects to improve compliance with labor law and promote women’s empowerment in the apparel sectors of Haiti, Jordan, Bangladesh, Cambodia and Vietnam.

The funds are made available through the department’s Bureau of International Labor Affairs, whose mission is to promote a fair global playing field for workers in the U.S. and around the world by enforcing trade commitments; strengthening labor standards; and combating international child labor, forced labor and human trafficking.

The DOL also shares a way for people to educate themselves on the countries and territories with the worst forms of child labor with the Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor webpage. Users can browse by region or country.

The department is not just working to improve labor laws and enforcement in the United States. Its commitment to other countries’ labor laws and enforcement is a part of its mission, and it plays an important role in the Unites States labor systems, too. For more information about the department’s work on these issues, visit https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ilab.

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