European Social Charter
The European Social Charter is a Council of Europe treaty which was adopted in 1961 and revised in 1996. The Revised Charter came into force in 1999 and is gradually replacing the initial 1961 treaty. The Charter sets out human rights and freedoms and establishes a supervisory mechanism guaranteeing their respect by the States parties.
The Charter was established to support the European Convention on Human Rights which is principally for civil and political rights, and to broaden the scope of protected fundamental rights to include social and economic rights. The Charter also guarantees positive rights and freedoms which concern all individuals in their daily existence. The basic rights set out in the Charter are as follows: housing,[1] health,[2] education, labour rights, full employment,[3] reduction of working hours[4] equal pay for equal work,[5] parental leave,[6] social security,[7] social and legal protection from poverty and social exclusion,[8] free movement of persons and non-discrimination, also the rights of migrant workers[9] and that of the persons with disabilities.[10]
States Parties to the Charter must submit annual reports on a part of the provisions of the Charter (be it the 1961 Charter or the 1996 Revised Charter), showing how they implement them in law and in practice.
ECSR
The European Committee of Social Rights (ECSR) is the body responsible for monitoring compliance in the States party to the Charter.
The ECSR is composed of 15 independent members who are elected by the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers for a period of six years, renewable once.
Under the 1995 Additional Protocol providing for a system of Collective Complaints which came into force in 1998, complaints of violations of the Charter may be lodged with the ECSR.
Certain organisations are entitled to lodge complaints with the ECSR (a special list of NGOs has been established, made up of NGOs enjoying participatory status with the Council of Europe). The ECSR examines the complaint and, if the formal requirements have been met, declares it admissible. The State Party may then respond in writing, and a hearing may be requested by either party to the procedure. Finally, the Committee comes to a decision on the merits.
See also
- European Convention on Human Rights
- European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
- European decency threshold
- EU labour law
- Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union
- Economic, social and cultural rights
- International human rights law
- Three generations of human rights
References
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 31
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 11
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 1
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 2
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 4
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 8
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 12
- ↑ European Social Charter, Part II, Article 30
- ↑ European Social Charter, Article 19
- ↑ European Social Charter, Article 15
External links
- European Social Charter website
- 1961 European Social Charter
- Revised European Social Charter
- 1995 Additional Protocol providing for a system of Collective Complaints
- Concise overview of the European Social Charter