Capital: Seoul

100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 111 Discrimination in Employment and Occupation (1958) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
reported violations - 2011
Background
See social dialogue as enterprises seek short-term policies of mass dismissals and unilateral cuts to wages and working conditions.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 111 Discrimination in Employment and Occupation (1958) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Seoul

reported violations- 2011
Trade union rights in law
While basic trade union rights are guaranteed, many excessive restrictions apply in the public sector. Numerous categories of public officials, as well as personnel dealing with trade unions or industrial relations
industrial relations
The individual and collective relations and dealings between workers and employers at the workplace, as well as the institutional interaction between unions, employers and also the government.
See social dialogue
, are denied union rights. Dismissed workers are also prohibited from keeping their union membership. Furthermore, public officials and teachers are prohibited from engaging in “acts in contravention of their duties” when conducting union activities – a provision that is open to abuse – and may not be involved in any sort of “political activities”. The right to collective bargaining
collective bargaining
The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
is also limited in the public sector as laws and budgets prevail over any collective agreement.
The right to strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
is recognised, but strikes that are not directly related to labour conditions are easily considered illegal – article 314 of the Criminal Code bars “obstruction of business”. Public officials and teachers are denied this right, and the list of “essential services
essential services
Services the interruption of which would endanger the life, personal safety or health of the whole or part of the population. Can include the hospital sector, electricity and water supply services, and air traffic control. Strikes can be restricted or even prohibited in essential services.
See Guide to the ITUC international trade union rights framework
” exceeds the ILO
International Labour Organization
A tripartite United Nations (UN) agency established in 1919 to promote working and living conditions. The main international body charged with developing and overseeing international labour standards.
See tripartism, ITUC Guide to international trade union rights
definition.
With the amendment of the Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act on 1 January 2010, wage payments to full-time union officials by employers were banned. A time-off system was instead established to prescribe the maximum number of union officials and hours for union activities for each workplace depending on its size. The amendment also brought positive change by allowing union pluralism at the enterprise level from July 2011; however, only a single bargaining channel is allowed.
Freedom of association / Right to organize
Principles
Freedom of association :
- >The right to freedom of association is enshrined in the Constitution.
- >The right to freedom of association is regulated by a Labour Code.
- >The right to freedom of association is recognized by law but strictly regulated.
In the second half of the year, tripartite discussions were held on the revision of the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act (TULRAA). The main discussion focused on the status of full-time union officials, union pluralism and the rights of atypical and public sector workers. In mid-December, a debate started in the National Assembly on the revised Bill. Amongst other issues, the revision of the TULRAA has, in effect, delayed the introduction of provisions on trade union pluralism for one and a half years. The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) strongly criticised the proposed revised Bill.
Anti-Union discrimination:
- >The law does not specifically protect workers from anti-union discrimination.
Employers have used Article 314 of the Criminal Code, which bars “obstruction of business”, to systematically harass and seek the incarceration of union leaders and to try to bankrupt unions. They have also commonly used the government’s prosecution of workers under this law to justify disciplinary measures, including dismissals. Article 314 offences carry heavy penalties and a worker found guilty faces up to five years’ imprisonment or an exorbitant fine.
Restrictions
Restrictions on workers' right to form and join organizations of their own choosing:
- >Single trade union system imposed by law and/or a system banning or limiting organising at a certain level (enterprise, industry and/or sector, regional and/or territorial, national)
- The Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act was amended on 1 January 2010 to allow union pluralism at the enterprise level from July 2011.
Restrictions on trade unions' right to organize their administration:
- >Restrictions on the right to elect representatives and self-administer in full freedom
- \"With the amendment on 1 January 2010 of the Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act wage payments to full-time union officials were banned. Instead a time-off system, stipulating the maximum number of union officials and the maximum number of hours that can be spent on union activities in each workplace, took effect in July 2010. The Ministry of Labour must be notified of the identity of third parties involved in collective bargaining and industrial disputes. Sanctions are foreseen if they intervene without the Ministry being notified. Requirements for the registration of third parties make this a very cumbersome operation. \"
- >Restrictions on the right to freely organise activities and formulate programmes
- The law on the Establishment and Operation of Public Officials' Trade Unions prohibits public sector unionists from engaging in "acts in contravention of their duties prescribed in other laws and regulations when doing union activities", which is a very broadly worded provision that is open to abuse. Public sector unionists are not permitted to be involved in any sort of "political activities".
Categories of workers prohibited or limited in law from forming or joining a union, or from holding a union office:
- >Armed forces
- >Police
- >Other civil servants and public employees
- There are numerous categories of public officials who are denied union rights, including politically-appointed officials and high level public officials, and firefighters. Pursuant to the law on the Establishment and Operation of Public Officials' Trade Unions, a union member can work on a full-time basis for the union but only with the authority of the employer and while taking unpaid leave.
- >Export processing zone (EPZ) workers
- The law on Special Economic Zones of July 2003 contains preferential provisions for foreign companies investing in these zones. It exempts them from many national regulations on labour standards.
- >Managerial and supervisory staff
- Managers, human resources personnel, and personnel dealing with trade unions or industrial relations are denied basic trade union rights.
- >Others categories
- The Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act bans dismissed workers from remaining members of a union and states that non-members of unions are not eligible for trade union office.
Right to collective bargaining
Principles
Right to collective bargaining:
- >The right to collective bargaining is enshrined in the Constitution.
- >The right to collective bargaining is recognised by law.
Restrictions
Restrictions on the principle of free and voluntary bargaining:
- >Exclusion of certain matters from the scope of bargaining (e.g. wages, hours)
- Civil servants have the right to collective bargaining, but the bargaining issues are limited to matters concerning trade unions, members\' pay and welfare and other working conditions. Hence, trade unions cannot address other economic and social issues.
- >Authorities' or employers' power to unilaterally annul, modify or extend content and scope of collective agreements
- Law and budgets prevail over Collective Bargaining Agreements, which makes it possible for the government to propose a budget that will nullify them.
Right to strike
Principles
Right to strike:
- >The right to strike is enshrined in the Constitution.
- >The right to strike is regulated by a Labour Code.
- >The right to strike is recognised by law but strictly regulated.
Restrictions
Legal barriers to lawful strike actions:
- >Compulsory recourse to arbitration, or to long and complex conciliation and mediation procedures prior to strike actions
- The Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act gives the Minister of Labour extensive powers to declare a situation of "Emergency Arbitration", which immediately halts all industrial action and compels the union to enter mediation. If the mediation is unsuccessful, the Labour Relations Committee can compel the parties to enter a process of compulsory, binding arbitration. The only limitations on this power are that the dispute must be related to public services, and the Minister must decide that the nature of the disruption could make the economy worse or disrupt "normal life."
Ban or limitations on certain types of strike actions:
- >Restrictions with respect to the objective of a strike (e.g. industrial disputes, economic and social issues, political, sympathy and solidarity reasons)
- Strikes are illegal if they are not specifically about labour conditions such as wages, welfare and working hours.
Limitations or ban on strikes in certain sectors:
- >Undue restrictions for "public servants"
- The law on the Establishment and Operation of Public Officials' Trade Unions maintains a ban on industrial action in the public sector, such as strikes and work slow-downs. The Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act and public service legislation ban strikes by people working for the central government or local governments, and by those involved in the production of military goods. Teachers are also banned from striking by virtue of the 1999 Law on Establishment and Operation of Trade Unions for Teachers.
- >Discretionary determination or excessively long list of "essential services" in which the right to strike is prohibited or severely restricted
- A 2006 amendment to the Trade Union and Labour Relations Adjustment Act abolished the system of compulsory arbitration in “essential services” and replaced it with a minimum service requirement (not exceeding 50% of striking workers) and permission to replace workers during strikes. The list of “essential services” still exceeds the ILO definition.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 111 Discrimination in Employment and Occupation (1958) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Seoul

reported violations - 2011
In practice
Collective action often becomes “illegal”, even when it is not in essential services
essential services
Services the interruption of which would endanger the life, personal safety or health of the whole or part of the population. Can include the hospital sector, electricity and water supply services, and air traffic control. Strikes can be restricted or even prohibited in essential services.
See Guide to the ITUC international trade union rights framework
, given the complicated legal procedures for organising
organising
The process of forming or joining a trade union, or inducing other workers to form or join one.
a strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
. The government continued to repress such action severely, including the imprisonment of hundreds of trade unionists. In the majority of cases, the principal charge was “obstruction of business”. Unionists striking “illegally” often receive a one-year prison sentence or heavy fines. Imprisoned trade unionists are generally isolated from one another in order to prevent them from taking collective action while in jail.
The authorities use the violence that takes place in some demonstrations and strikes to justify the detention of trade union leaders; however, unions insist police action is unnecessarily provocative and disproportionately brutal. Prosecutors are quick to issue arrest warrants as soon as workers go on strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
, or sometimes the moment a strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
is announced. Police or security agencies mount surveillance operations, some of a sophisticated nature, in order to capture the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
leaders. This surveillance is sometimes carried out on members of the trade unionists’ families. Unions’ offices and telecommunications are routinely monitored.
See collective bargaining agreement
. The continued ban on union pluralism at the plant level reinforces the negative impact of these “paper unions” in denying workers their collective bargaining collective bargaining The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
rights.
Migrant workers are subject to serious abuses of labour rights. While the laws offer them similar protection to local workers in terms of wages and basic conditions, in reality most are paid far less than their Korean counterparts, forced to work long hours and often have their wages withheld. They are tied to their employer and face restrictions in changing jobs, making them particularly vulnerable.
As of October 2009, there were about 680,000 migrant workers in South Korea, mainly working in factories producing textiles and electronics, but also involved in prostitution. In September 2008, the government announced it would halve the estimated 220,000 illegal migrant workers by 2012 and has increased the sometimes violent deportation raids in workplaces and homes.
The Migrants’ Trade Union (MTU) was founded in April 2005 and is a member of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU). However, the government has consistently refused to recognise it as a legal union and has not let it engage in trade union representation or collective bargaining
collective bargaining
The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
, despite the fact that Korean law allows all workers to organise and that in 2006 the Seoul Higher Court recognised MTU as a legal union. The government has appealed this decision and has arrested and deported MTU leadership several times since 2005.
In November, a day after the close of the G20 summit, Michel Catuira, president of the Seoul-Gyeonggi-Incheon Migrants’ Trade Union, was summoned to appear before the Immigration Office for unlawful political activities.
Korea already has very high levels (more than 50%) of labour casualisation casualisation The practice of increasing the flexibility of the workforce by replacing permanent, full-time workers with workers on temporary, irregular contracts. , but according to unions, recent initiatives to privatise and merge public utilities are leading to increases in this figure, a rapid rise in laid off public employees, increased job instability and lowered working conditions for those remaining in employment. Casual workers have restricted rights to organise.
In February 2010, estimates showed that more than five million workers, or one-third of the South Korean workforce, have already been made contract workers, receiving just 60% of the average wages of permanent workers. According to the Korean unions, the new “National Employment Strategy 2020”, a government initiative to raise employment, includes provisions that will further deregulate private employment agencies, expand indirect employment, and increase precarious employment.
See collective bargaining agreement
agreement, a clause which is often used by employers. As of May 2010, 41 enterprises had unilaterally cancelled collective agreements.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 111 Discrimination in Employment and Occupation (1958) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Seoul

reported violations - 2011
Violations
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike the union had launched on 18 March 2005. Even though they had an official permit to conduct the protest, the police declared the demonstration to be illegal and arrested everyone present. The union members were eventually released after agreeing to pay fines. The court decision is final, and union members can now seek repayment of their fines – estimated to KRW 30,000,000 (EUR 19,700).
The newly organised union of civil servants, the Korean Government Employees’ Union (KGEU), has been struggling for official recognition recognition The designation by a government agency of a union as the bargaining agent for workers in a given bargaining unit, or acceptance by an employer that its employees can be collectively represented by a union. as the labour ministry has three times refused to recognise it because its membership reportedly contains dismissed public workers and non-civil servant staff. The union denies having dismissed workers as members and says staffers account for only eight of some 100,000 members. A lawsuit has been filed against government officials for abuse of authority.
In March 2010 a rally planned by the KGEU was termed an “illegal collective action”. After the rally the Ministry of Public Administration and Security said that KGEU had violated the law by pushing though with a launching ceremony and that it (the Ministry) would fire 18 union leaders, including 13 headquarter heads including the KGEU Vice Chairman Park Yi-jae and Secretary General Ra Il-ha. The authorities also stated that they would punish all government employees who attended the rally after confirming their identities and ban all the union’s activities including establishing an office, picketing picketing Demonstration or patrolling outside a workplace to publicise the existence of an industrial dispute or a strike, and to persuade other workers not to enter the establishment or discourage consumers from patronising the employer. Secondary picketing involves picketing of a neutral establishment with a view to putting indirect pressure on the target employer. and leafleting. It would also impose up to KRW 5 million (EUR 3,270) in fines.
By banning all activities under the KGEU name, the Ministry has virtually rendered the union unable to function. According to the KGEU, the union is not an illegal group but a union undergoing the formation process according to the law; notification documents of a new union have been filed with the Labour Ministry, but these have been returned.
In May it was reported that Korea’s railway operator Korail and its subsidiary railway scholarship foundation decided to reinstate a provision which disqualifies the children of employees who have been given internal disciplinary action over the past five years from receiving scholarships. This provision drew protests from the workers’ union.
Korail said that this was a previous provision of its scholarship foundation, abolished in April 2009 but reinstated from December 2009. The Korea Railway Workers’ Union (KRWU) said that the provision was specifically established when Korail was taking disciplinary action against unionists who had participated in an eight-day strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
in November 2001 to punish the children of the 12,000 union members who joined the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
. The scholarship program offers a maximum of KRW one million per semester for university students. Korail refuted the union’s claim, saying that the provision has been on the books since 2004 and was only removed accidentally.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike for 40 days after a conflict over editorial independence. In the run-up to local elections the workers decided to return to work to help with the workload. Despite this Lee Keun-Haeng, president of MBC TV union, was dismissed on 4 June just after the elections. Forty other union members, producers, reporters and technicians were given disciplinary notice of suspension, wage reductions and warning letters by the management as a result of their participation in the strike strike The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike .
According to the Korean Metalworkers’ Union (KMWU), on 9 August 2010, following a KMWU appeal, the Seoul High Court reduced the sentence of Mr. Han Sang-kyun, former Chair of the KMWU Ssangyong Motor Company Union company union Can be used to describe either an enterprise union or a yellow union. , from four years to three years. The court also freed 21 other trade unionists imprisoned in the same case. However, they are all released with a three- or four-year suspended sentence, which means that if arrested during this period they will have to serve the full term of their court sentences, inevitably resulting in severe restrictions of their union activities. Mr. Kwon Sun-man, a KMWU vice president, was set to be released in October while KMWU executive member Mr. Kim Hyuk, is still serving a four-year sentence.
The unionists were imprisoned in 2009 after a 77-day strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
by the Ssangyong Motor Company Union
company union
Can be used to describe either an enterprise union or a yellow union.
started after the company ordered mass dismissals without notifying the union and thus in violation of the existing collective agreement. In August 2009 Ssangyong Motor management also broke off negotiations and organised riot police to storm the plant’s paint shop where around 700 workers had held a sit-in strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
since May. Most of the strikers have had difficulties finding new jobs because they have been blacklisted in the local community.
On 21 October 2010, the Korea Electronics (KEC) factory local union local union A local branch of a higher-level trade union such as a national union. branch of the Korean Metal Workers Union (KMWU) began a sit-in to protest lay-offs and union repression. However, the company as well as local authorities and the government mobilised 1,000 riot police to contain the protest. The police prevented solidarity groups from bringing food and first-aid to the factory and deployed water cannons to harass the workers. Five union members were seriously injured when a police helicopter flew over them at low altitude. Kim Joon-il, the president of the regional branch of KMWU, was faced with police hoping to arrest him when he turned up to the place the company had said was the negotiation venue. He then set himself on fire in protest and was later taken to hospital in a serious condition.
On 3 November, the company promised to resume negotiations, and workers suspended their action. However, by the end of the year no negotiation session had taken place and instead four union members were detained.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike concerning contract workers. Precariously employed women workers at Kiryung Electronics had formed a union in July 2005. On 24 August 2005, the KMWU members started a strike strike The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike when the company, contrary to promises, had failed to directly employ and had instead sacked dispatched workers that the company claimed were sub-contracted. In the November 2010 agreement, the company promised to hire the remaining ten union members on strike strike The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike into permanent positions and both sides agreed to withdraw their lawsuits. The case is particularly significant as it is the first time in Korea that an employer has agreed to directly hire dismissed irregular workers into permanent positions.
On 22 July 2010 the Supreme Court ruled on a case filed by former in-house subcontracted workers at Ulsan Plant of Hyundai Motors and essentially stated that when an in-house subcontracted employee had been employed for longer than two years under the employers supervisions, s/he shall be treated as being directly employed by the contractor employer (Hyundai Motor). The court thus confirmed Hyundai Motor’s responsibility to employ in-house subcontracted workers directly. Shortly after the ruling, the Korean Metal Workers’ Union (KMWU), representing the in-house subcontracted workers at Hyundai Motors, asked the company for collective bargaining
collective bargaining
The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
on direct employment, but management refused, saying that the union is not its bargaining counterpart.
On 4 November the KMWU filed a lawsuit demanding that in-house subcontracted workers with the service period of two years or longer should be moved to a regular job and compensated for the differences in lost wages – they earned around 50-60% of the wages of direct employees. The KMWU also submitted an application for mediation
mediation
A process halfway between conciliation and arbitration, in mediation a neutral third party assists the disputing parties in reaching a settlement to an industrial dispute by suggesting possible, non-binding solutions.
See arbitration, conciliation
of an industrial dispute
industrial dispute
A conflict between workers and employers concerning conditions of work or terms of employment. May result in industrial action.
over collective bargaining
collective bargaining
The process of negotiating mutually acceptable terms and conditions of employment as well as regulating industrial relations between one or more workers’ representatives, trade unions, or trade union centres on the one hand and an employer, a group of employers or one or more employers’ organisations on the other.
See collective bargaining agreement
with Hyundai Motors to the National Labor Relations Commission. The union also conducted strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
votes among the unionised non-regular workers in several plants, with the majority voting for a strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
.
On 15 November subcontracted workers from one plant were unexpectedly dismissed due to the sudden closure of the sub-contractor. Hyundai Motor refused to hire the workers directly and instead asked them to sign a contract with a new contracting firm when and if they withdrew their membership from the KMWU. Forty of them then held a protest, stopping production. They were all immediately arrested by the police after only one hour of protest. After that, 500 workers gathered, and an overall strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
was called.
On 9 December the workers agreed to end the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
after facing mounting pressure and a reported KRW 16.2 billion in damage suits. The Central Labour Relation Committee had decided the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
was illegal, and the police issued arrest warrants for 16 union leaders and members. Three unions, including one representing the contract workers, met and agreed to halt the strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
on the condition that management would negotiate in good-faith to make the workers full-time Hyundai staff. The strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
had been met by beatings and tear gas by local police - scores of contract workers were arrested, and one contract worker attempted to set himself on fire during a rally on 20 November.
More than 1,500 especially subcontracted workers have been unionised since the Supreme Court ruling in July.
On 1 December 2010 two members of the GM Daewoo Irregular Workers Chapter of the Korean Metal Workers’ Union’s Incheon Local Branch climbed the arch that stands ten meters above the entrance to the factory in Bupyeong and began a ‘high-altitude sit-in’ that lasted beyond the end of the year. In addition, on 20 December, Sin Hyeon-chang, president of the GM Daewoo Irregular Workers Chapter, began a hunger strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
, camping out overnight near the factory.
The workers are demanding the reinstatement of 15 union members among those laid off under the pretext of disciplinary action directly after the union chapter was founded in September 2007. Despite the fact that the Labour Standards Act protects the right of all workers to form trade unions, GM Daewoo response was to fire all the officers. The workers are also asking management to recognise the union and regularise irregular workers. Management has refused to address these issues and has continuously rejected negotiations.
Police officers stationed near the protest site have also prevented supporters from lifting weatherproofing equipment up to the workers living on the arch. They are now suffering from hypothermia and frostbite.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike demanding union recognition recognition The designation by a government agency of a union as the bargaining agent for workers in a given bargaining unit, or acceptance by an employer that its employees can be collectively represented by a union. , minimum wage, working time reduction, and fair allocation of buses. The companies immediately dispersed thugs and substitute workers to break the strikes, and the police arrested 76 union members on the first day of the strikes.
On 23 May 2010, 183 members of the Korean Teachers and Educators Union (KTU) were dismissed from their posts for allegedly joining the Democratic Labor Party (DLP), an opposition party, based on the fact that the individuals made private donations to the DLP. Jeong Jin-Hoo, president of the KTU, begun a hunger strike
strike
The most common form of industrial action, a strike is a concerted stoppage of work by employees for a limited period of time. Can assume a wide variety of forms.
See general strike, intermittent strike, rotating strike, sit-down strike, sympathy strike, wildcat strike
in protest. The Ministry of Education, Science and Technology made its decision to dismiss the teachers for breaching a political neutrality clause that teachers and civil servants are expected to follow under the Civil Servants’ Law.
The decision was postponed awaiting legal judgement, but in October the Ministry again ordered each provincial education office to proceed with the immediate dismissal of 134 of the teachers as from 1 November, before the official court’s verdict. Four others would be suspended. Of those fired, 50 teachers ― who publicly denounced the government ― would be dismissed without benefits, depriving them of pensions and other perks given to civil servants. The dismissal process was expected to take about 60 days. Some unionists began hunger strikes and were planning anti-government demonstrations.
Unionists state that school principals who have made donations to the ruling political party, on the same basis as the 183 teachers, have never been subject to the same harsh disciplinary measures from the political authorities and that there is a catalogue of disproportionate disciplinary measures taken against KTU leaders and members who take part in trade union activity, amounting to union discrimination.
In 2009, 16 KTU officials had been detained after a march denouncing the government’s decision to punish 88 KTU teachers who were considered to be the instigators of a “Declaration of State Affairs” signed by 17,000 teachers.
100 Equal Remuneration for Work of Equal Value (1951) 111 Discrimination in Employment and Occupation (1958) 138 Minimum Age for Employment (1973) 182 Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention (1999)
Capital: Seoul
