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Conditions of Work and Employment Series No. 27
Section 2:
Domestic work: Diversity and regulatory dimensions
outlines the nature of
working time in domestic work and the elements of these working time arrangements that
regulatory measures can be expected to address. It then considers the workers who engage
in domestic work, highlighting their diversity, in particular with regard to the legal mode
of their engagement, stage on the life-course and citizenship status.
Section 3:
A conceptual framework for regulation
sets out contemporary thinking on
working time regulation as it is relevant to domestic work. It identifies a number of trends
and issues that have influenced the detailed proposals contained in this study, namely the
role of working time regulation in promoting work/family reconciliation,
the recognition of
the precarious nature of working time arrangements in domestic work and the notion of
―working time flexibility‖.
These principles are elaborated upon in Section 4:
Principles for the regulation of
working time in domestic work
, which draws from the literature discussed in Section 3 to
outline a set of principles in which to ground regulatory measures, and which underpin the
Model Law. The following principles are considered in detail:
legal recognition of the value of care-work;
work/family reconciliation for domestic workers;
universality of working time protection;
unity of working time law;
regulated flexibility and ―working time capability‖;
the balance of regulatory techniques;
the subject of
regulation;
innovative regulation;
working time laws in their policy environments.
Section 5:
International standards: An evolution
outlines significant trends in ILO
standard setting. It demonstrates that the coverage of sectors and occupations by the
standards and their application to non-standard and precarious work have expanded over
time. The study argues that ILO working time norms for domestic workers would reflect
and entrench this productive expansion of the working time standards.
Section 6:
A “framed flexibility” model
introduces the Model Law that is proposed by
the study as a resource for the design of regulatory measures on working time in domestic
work. It is argued that a ―framed flexibility‖ model can be adopted, which permits the kind
of flexibility needed in many domestic jobs while simultaneously offering sufficient
protection to domestic workers.
The regulatory precedents of the Model Law are outlined,
which include a range of ILO standards and laws on domestic work from South Africa and
Uruguay.
The Model Law has four essential features:
First, it contains a number of key ―framing standards‖, which provide a framework
within which working time flexibility is constrained
by limiting working hours,
mandating rest periods and designating certain periods as ―unsocial‖.
Secondly, the study proposes a set of ―flexibility‖ standards. These address the
unpredictable requirements that can arise in certain domestic work occupations, by
permitting periods of on-call work. These standards also respond to workers‘ need
to effectively combine paid labour with their family and community lives by
allowing them to adjust their working hours and take emergency family leave.