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Multilevel Tools for Protection of Social Rights: a Hypothesis

Akaharu Koyama    Researcher, Faculty of Law, Waseda University, Japan

María Katia García Landaburu    Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Lima, Perú

Alberto Mattei    PhD in European and Comparative legal studies, Faculty of Law, University of Trento, Italy

Francesca Marinelli    Università degli Studi di Milano, Italia    

Quentin Detienne    Assistant, Faculty of Law, Political Science and Criminology, University of Liège, Belgium

Gaye Burcu Yıldız    Associate Professor, Faculty of Political Sciences, Ankara University, Turkey

Evelina Zurauskaite    Lecturer, Faculty of Law and Faculty of Political Science and Diplomacy, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania

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abstract

The article analyses the usage of multilevel tools (such as cooperation among international organizations, regional instruments, activities of regional and national courts and private subjects’ actions) in the social rights’ protection field. A closer look is given at the cooperation among international organizations (the ILO and the IMF, the World Bank Group, the OECD, the WTO and the UN) and at one of regional collaboration models within the sphere of workers’ rights protection: the North American Agreement on Labour Collaboration (NAALC). Within the scenario where balance between political and judicial powers is no longer affected only at national level but should be considered also from multilevel perspective, the redefinition of the role and responsibility of regional and national courts plays an important role in the protection of fundamental social rights. It is worth mentioning the mutual influence between the CJEU and the ECtHR in their fight against discrimination. On a national level, the role of national Constitutional Courts in the field of fundamental social rights is analyzed in different countries (Asia, Europe and South America). Finally, the article studies the adoption of transnational instruments by private actors – companies and trade unions – that collectively or individually try to protect social rights at work. Two specific instruments have been chosen: transnational company agreement and code of conduct.

Published
June 1, 2015
Language
EN
Copyright: © 2015 Akaharu Koyama, María Katia García Landaburu, Alberto Mattei, Francesca Marinelli, Quentin Detienne, Gaye Burcu Yıldız, Evelina Zurauskaite. This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.