PART I AN INTRODUCTION 1. Understanding the International Labour Organization (ILO) I. An ILO Primer 2. The Ill-Founded Challenge to the Right to Strike in 2012 I. The Showdown at the 2012 International Labour Conference II. Why Then? III. And Now? PART II A REBUTTAL: ON THE QUESTION OF MANDATES 3. The ILO Committee of Experts has a Mandate to 'Interpret' ILO Conventions, not the Constituents I.
A Brief History II. The Mandates of ILO Supervisory Bodies Establish No Hierarchy Among Them III. The Committee of Experts and the Interpretation of Conventions IV. Conclusion PART III A REBUTTAL: THE INDISPUTABLE CASE FOR THE RIGHT TO STRIKE 4. The Rules of Interpretation: The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) I. Applicability of the VCLT II. VCLT Rules of Interpretation as Customary International Law III. ILO Practice 5.
The Ordinary Meaning of Convention 87 Supports the Existence of a Right to Strike 6. The Object and Purpose of Convention 87 Supports the Existence of a Right to Strike 7. The Subsequent Agreement and Practice between the Parties Concerning Convention 87 Supports the Existence of a Right to Strike: ILO Jurisprudence I. Some History II. The Right to Strike is Enshrined in Convention 87 III. The ILO Constitution IV. The Right to Strike in Subsequent ILO Instruments V. 2015 Tripartite Meeting on the Right to Strike 8.
The Subsequent Agreement and Practice between the Parties Concerning Convention 87 Supports the Existence of a Right to Strike: Beyond the ILO I. United Nations II. Council of Europe Instruments III. The Right to Strike and the European Union IV. The Inter-American System V. African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights VI. The Right to Strike and Trade Arrangements VII. High Court Cases Since 2012 Affirm the Right to Strike 9.
Other Methods under Article 31 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) Support the Existence of the Right to Strike I. 'Any Relevant Rules of International Law Applicable in the Relations between the Parties' (Article 31(3)(c) VCLT) II. 'A Special Meaning Shall be Given to a Term if it is Established that the Parties So Intended' (Article 31(4) VCLT) III. Further Interpretation Principles IV. Inadmissible 'Creative Interpretation'? 10. Though Unwarranted, Article 32 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) also Supports the Existence of the Right to Strike I. Resort to the Preparatory Work of Convention 87 is Unwarranted II. Application of Article 32 VCLT would Not Affect the Outcome were it Applied 11.
The Right to Strike is Recognised as Customary International Law I. The United Nations II. The ILO III. National Constitutions IV. Legislation V. Judicial Opinion VI. Conclusion PART IV WHERE TO FROM HERE? 12. Settling the Dispute: The International Court of Justice? 13.
The Aftermath I. Impact on ILO Supervisory System II. The Impact Outside the ILO 14. Conclusion I. The Return of the Strike.