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A participatory process is a sequence of participatory activities (e.g. first filling out a survey, then making proposals, discussing them in face-to-face or virtual meetings, and finally prioritizing them) with the aim of defining and making a decision on a specific topic.
Examples of participatory processes are: a process of electing committee members (where candidatures are first presented, then debated and finally a candidacy is chosen), participatory budgets (where proposals are made, valued economically and voted on with the money available), a strategic planning process, the collaborative drafting of a regulation or norm, the design of an urban space or the production of a public policy plan.
1 - Workers' power
Use this space to discuss theme 1
About this process
A worker-powered transition starts with freedom of association and civic space
Without freedom of association and the right to protest and organise, workers will be left on the receiving hand of the transition. This is why freedom of association is one of the solutions to climate change. Labour rights groups and trade unions are engaging directly with workers and taking action for a Just Transition through research, advocacy, workplace awareness raising, supporting workers in the clean up after disasters and engaging with communities on climate. Trade unions are also bargaining with employers on climate issues. Unions’ work for a Just Transition is threatened by union busting and the repression of workers’ organisations, targeting of worker leaders and by the gap that exists between technocratic decision making, effective policies and practices and workers’ direct experiences.
To enable a worker-centred transition, workers must be able to lead in climate planning and to organise and bargain collectively; trade unions must have an inclusive, nondiscriminatory and participatory seat at the table when decisions about climate transition are being made and workers must be equipped with the knowledge, information, skills and access to legal support needed to be a driving force towards new models of production.
Collective bargaining agreements must be enforceable, and companies must be held to account for human and workers’ rights violations, including ecological damage caused by their operations. Workers’ organizations and their communities must be able to exercise their right to protest and dissent about all workers’ rights and human rights violations, in response to imminent danger and to call on their governments for change. Yet, too often fashion companies have benefited from state repression of environmental and human rights activists to further exploit workers, communities and the environment. Brands exert political and economic pressure internationally and domestically through the promise of investment and the threat of relocation. Experience shows that they generally use their power to influence governments to minimise labour and environmental regulations. Power must be shifted from brands to trade unions, workers’ organisations and citizens.
경제적 역량 강화 없이는 진정한 권력도 없다 (경제적 역량 강화가 우선)
노동자들이 겨우 생계를 유지할 수 있을 정도의 수입(생활임금의 약 1/3)을 벌 때, 그들은 노동 조건이 아무리 열악하더라도 현재 직업에 크게 의존할 수밖에 없다. 직장을 잃는 것에 대한 두려움과 가족을 먹여 살리거나, 집세를 내거나, 다른 기본적인 필요를 충당할 수 없다는 두려움은 그들을 침묵하게 만드는 강력한 덫입니다. 또한 낮은 임금은 저축 및/또는 부채 노예가 없다는 것을 의미하므로 조직화 시도로 인해 해고되더라도 기댈 곳이 없습니다. 이것은 폭발의 순환을 영속시키고 그들이 가질 수 있는 모든 힘을 제거합니다. - TU 조…노동자와 노동조합이 정의로운 전환의 원동력이 되기 위해 필요한 지식, 정보, 기술 및 법적 지원은 무엇인가?
아래 공간을 사용하여 이 질문에 대해 토론하십시오.정의로운 전환기에서 노동조합의 활동을 어떻게 가장 잘 설명할 수 있을까?
노동조합은 어떤 일을 하나요? 정확히 어떤 일을 하고 계신가요? 노동조합 활동을 어떻게 잘 설명할 수 있습니까?Related processes
Reference: CC-PART-2025-03-2