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Labor Inspection Strategies in Brazil Junia Maria Barreto Director of Department of Occupational Health and Safety Ministry of Labor and Employment
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Labor Inspection in Brazil 3162 inspectors in a federal system – 1/3 specialists in occupational health or safety engineering 27 regional units + 115 subregional units Secretary of Labor Inspection in the Ministry of Labour and Employment programmes include: Worker Protection Network Slave Work Child Labor Health and Safety at Work – inspection and regulation actions Labor inspectors: free access to all workplaces power to impose interdictions or debarments and to impose fines can have access to all documents related to the compliance of the labor law analyses work-related accidents Close relations to employers’ and workers’ representatives and other public institutions
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A Paradigm Shift 2003-2004 Structural changes, new inspectors, new career law Goals of productivity with financial impacts Development of new strategies and inspection methods with focus on economical sectors, clusters and productive chains Annual planning focused in problems diagnosed in consultation with workers’ representatives 2008: new changes in the career brings the challenge of constructing a new and better management system of the Labor Inspection
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Results
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Brazilian Experience with the Steel Industry Productive chain of the steel industry: slave labor (1996) Carajá’s region: 15 companies that receive iron ore from Vale do Rio Doce Company 4 million tons of pig iron per year, for exportation 9 million m 3 of coal per year 1.000 vegetal coal small producers 30.000 direct and indirect jobs 1999: signature of a term of adjustment to promote better working conditions in coal production – results not sustainable 2004: commitment of the industrial association of Carajás with the end of slave labor with the creation of a non-governmental organization (“Instituto Carvão Cidadão”) 2005: National Agreement for the Eradication of Slave Labour in Brazil voluntary effort aiming at dignifying and modernizing labour relations in the productive chain from all the sectors that have kept workers in conditions analogous to slavery promoted by ILO and non-governmental organizations, ratified by the federal government signature of more than 100 companies
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Brazilian Experience with the Steel Industry 2006: 417 coal producers audited in three areas Results: 85% legalized workers better working and safety conditions actions for reintegration of workers that are still working under degrading or unworthy conditions to overcome their situation of social exclusion Problems: local differences / variations signs of slave labor (from 5 to 60% of the producers) complex social relations
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