Acción Colectiva Laboral
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The project will work with civil society and workers' organizations in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras to strengthen their capacity and bolster their collaboration with government agencies, the private sector and other stakeholders to protect labor rights and reduce child labor and forced labor. The project will focus on organizations that represent indigenous, Afro-descendant, and Garifuna populations, while promoting gender and racial equity.
The Problem
Workers and their families who are vulnerable to labor exploitation in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras, are often from indigenous, Afro-descendant, or Garifuna communities. They are frequently among the poorest and most marginalized groups, with limited access to education, health services, and housing. They are also more likely to work in informal jobs without social security, health benefits, or other employment protections.
Civil society and workers' organizations could help to address child labor, forced labor, and other unacceptable working conditions, but their role has been restricted by government controls and violence against trade union leaders.
These organizations often face challenges in complying with burdensome legal requirements for registration with their respective governments. They also have difficulty mobilizing resources to carry out their missions and harnessing data and technology to increase the impact of their work.
Our Strategy
The project seeks to increase the organizational resilience and technical capacity of more than 45 civil society and workers organizations across 6 Departments in Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras where people of African descent, Garifuna and indigenous populations reside. These organizations will receive direct training, mentorship and small grants funding to strengthen their ability to address child labor and forced labor, and promote inclusive, safe, and healthy working conditions in their communities.
The project will also create opportunities for greater collaboration among civil society and workers’ organizations, government agencies, the private sector, and other actors to advance labor rights at the local, national and regional levels. For example, 1,200 individuals representing civil society, government and the private sector will be trained on labor rights and inclusion in order to strengthen national and multi-country coalitions to increase collective actions to protect workers, reduce child labor and forced labor, and improve working conditions.
Local leaders, children and youth, women, and other workers will be at the core of the project. Their needs and expectations will inform project activities.
Results
- The project completed its bootcamp training where 21 partner organizations in El Salvador, 23 partner organizations in Honduras, and 20 partner organizations in Guatemala received diplomas of completion. Participants demonstrated increased knowledge on labor rights and labor laws in their own countries as well as organizational governance, finance, fundraising, and monitoring and evaluation methods.
- The project carried out various research products, including most recently a study examining the labor conditions in all three countries.
- The project has signed agreements with key partners like sustainability and corporate social responsibility associations, government bodies such as ministries of labor, and other civil society organizations to coordinate actions to reduce CL, FL, and OUCW.
- Grantee:
- Pan American Development Foundation
- Implementing Partners:
- El Salvador: GMIES (Grupo de Monitoreo Independiente de El Salvador), Guatemala: Tz’ununija’ (Movimiento de Mujeres Indígenas Tz’ununija’), Honduras: COIPRODEN (Coordinadora de Instituciones Privadas Pro las Niñas, Niños, Adolescentes, Jóvenes y sus Derechos)
- Contact Information:
- globalkids@ilab.dol.gov / Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking (OCFT)
- Tags:
- Child Labor
- Awareness Raising
- Capacity Building
- Central America
- Civil Society Organizations
- El Salvador
- Forced Labor
- Gender and Racial Equity
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- Northern Central America
- Worker Voice
- Workers Organizations