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Respect, rights and recognition. Domestic work and the ILO standard setting process 2010-2011.

Respect, rights and recognition. Domestic work and the ILO standard setting process 2010-2011.

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by IDWFED published May 12, 2010 12:00 AM
Contributors: Thiruvalluvar Yovel, Bart Verstraeten/World Solidarity vzw, ACV-CSC Food and Services
For this policy paper, we are indebted to a whole number of people and organisations for their valuable support and advice. In the first place, we would like to thank all of our partner organisations in Africa, Asia and Latin America who have been working with and for domestic workers all these years.

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Research reports, working paper

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For this policy paper, we are indebted to a whole number of people and organisations for their valuable support and advice.

In the first place, we would like to thank all of our partner organisations in Africa, Asia and Latin America who have been working with and for domestic workers all these years.

This rather “invisible” group of workers could have easily been forgotten or overlooked, but you and your organisations have ensured that this was never the case.

When we suggested you to respond to the ILO questionnaire on domestic work, you were convinced you had to do this to ensure that the voice of domestic workers would be heard in the ILO standard-setting process.

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