The North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation
The North American Agreement on Labor
Cooperation (NAALC) was signed on
September 14, 1993, by the Presidents
of Mexico and the United States, and
the Prime Minister of Canada, as one
of the supplementary accords to the
North America Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA). It entered into force on
January 1, 1994.
The NAALC was the first international
agreement on labor to be linked to
an international trade agreement.
It provides a mechanism for member
countries to ensure the effective
enforcement of existing and future
domestic labor standards and laws
without interfering in the sovereign
functioning of the different national
labor systems, an approach that made
it novel and unique. Likewise, the
Commission for Labor Cooperation is
the only international body since
the founding of the International
Labor Organization (ILO) in 1919,
to be devoted exclusively to labor
rights and labor-related matters.
Along with its companion agreement
on environmental cooperation, the
NAALC adds a social dimension to NAFTA.
Through the NAALC, the regional trading
partners seek to improve working conditions
and living standards, and to protect,
enhance and enforce basic workers'
rights. To accomplish these goals
the NAALC establishes a set of Objectives,
Obligations and Labor Principles that
all Parties are committed to promote;
it also creates mechanisms for cooperative
activities and intergovernmental consultations,
as well as for independent evaluations
and dispute settlement related to
the enforcement of each nation's labor
laws.
Objectives,
Obligations and Principles
The National Administrative
Offices
Public Communications
Summaries
Table
Evaluation Committees
of Experts and Arbitral Panels
REVIEW OF THE
NORTH AMERICAN AGREEMENT ON LABOR
COOPERATION
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