160 million children – 63 million girls and 97 million boys – are victims of child labour, accounting for almost 1 in 10 of all children worldwide; 79 million children – nearly half of all those in child labour – perform hazardous work that directly endangers their health, safety and moral development.
50 million people are in modern slavery, including 28 million in forced labour and 22 million in forced marriage. 1 in 4 victims of modern slavery are children.
On average, women are paid 23 per cent less than their male counterparts. Hundreds of millions of people suffer from discrimination in the world of work because of the colour of their skin, their ethnicity or social origin, their religion or political beliefs, their age, gender, sexual identity or orientation, disability or because of their HIV status.
More than 40 per cent of the world’s population lives in countries that have ratified neither of the freedom of association and collective bargaining Conventions.
Such a situation cannot and must not continue. These issues are at the core of the ILO mission: in 1998, the ILO's member States expressed their shared commitment to uphold basic human rights at work by adopting the Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.
FUNDAMENTALS mission and vision
ILO’s Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work Branch (FUNDAMENTALS) was established in 2013, bringing together the International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) and the Department for the Promotion of the Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work (DECLARATION).
FUNDAMENTALS mission is to serve as a centre of excellence on policies and action to support the realization of fundamental principles and rights at work. FUNDAMENTALS supports member States to fulfil their obligations to respect, to promote and to realize, in good faith, the fundamental principles and rights at work by facilitating the strengthening of relevant legislation and institutions including employers’ and workers’ organizations and the commitment of national duty bearers, rights-holders and enterprises.
Fundamental principles and rights at work provide the foundation on which equitable and just societies are built. They are the starting point for a virtuous circle of effective social dialogue, better conditions for workers, rising enterprise productivity, increased consumer demand, more and better jobs and social protection, and for formalizing the informal economy.
Freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining represent the primary vehicle by which this can be achieved, enabling employers and workers to negotiate key aspects of their relationship. Ending discrimination will unlock the potential of the millions of women, men and youth currently excluded or undervalued.
Eradicating child labour and ensuring that all children are in quality education, and that young people receive the training they need to fulfil their productive and creative potential, will contribute to ending poverty, to stronger economies and to a better future for all. Ending forced labour, in all its forms, means that workers will neither be robbed of their dignity nor their right to freely-chosen employment.
Mr Vanhuynegem is ILO FUNDAMENTALS Chief since April 2021. He holds a Master Degree in Economics and a Special Master Degree in Econometrics from the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). He joined the ILO in 1997 starting in Ivory Coast and then in Lima Sub-regional office, as junior professional officer on social protection. He also worked in the ILO headquarters for several large technical cooperation programmes on social exclusion, social protection and local development. From 2011 to 2015, Mr Vanhuynegem was the senior enterprise specialist for the Andean Countries, based in Lima and the Director of the Sub regional Office for the Andean Countries from 2016 until March 2021.
Staff list
Ms Michaelle DE COCK - Head of Unit
Research Cluster
Mr Federico BLANCO ALLAIS - Senior Research Officer
Ms Gabriella BREGLIA - Policy Research Officer
Ms Francesca FRANCAVILLA - Senior Economist
Mr Luis FUJIWARA - Project Coordinator (EvA project)
Mr Lorenzo GUARCELLO - Policy Research and Statistics Officer (RTA project)
Mr Scott LYON - Policy Research Officer
Mr Gady SAIOVICI - Senior Economist
Ms Lorraine WONG - Research Officer (RTA project)
Monitoring and Evaluation Cluster
Ms Lucia DI ROSA - Monitoring and Evaluation Officer (Multi Partner Fund Project - 8.7 Accelerator Lab)
Mr Bobur NAZARMUHAMEDOV - Monitoring and Evaluation Officer (Global Accelerator Lab Project - 8.7 Accelerator Lab)
Ms Sherelle WILSON - Monitoring and Database Officer
Mr Martin HAHN - Head of Unit
Technical Advisory Cluster
Mr Daniel CORK - FPRW Technical Specialist on Freedom of Association & Collective Bargaining
Ms Alix NASRI - FPRW Technical Specialist on Forced Labour
Mr Benjamin SMITH - FPRW Technical Specialist on Child Labour
Ms Lisa WONG-RAMESAR - FPRW Technical Specialist on Non-discrimination
Advocacy and Communication Cluster
Mr Khalid ABDULLA - Communication Officer
Ms Liliana CASTILLO-RUBIO - Communication, Web and Databases Assistant
Ms Jane COLOMBINI - Technical Officer (Alliance 8.7)
Ms Andrea DAVILA - Project Coordinator (MAP'16 Project)
Ms Aurélie HAUCHÈRE VONG - Advocacy and Communication Officer (Bridge Project)
Mr David NESTVOGEL - Technical Officer
Ms Sophie DE CONINCK - Head of Unit
Regional Desks
Mr Simon HILLS - Senior Programme and Operations Officer (Europe/Arab States, and Crisis)
Mr Jean-Marie KAGABO - Senior Programme and Operations Officer (Africa)
Ms Cristina MALDONADO - Programme and Operations Officer (Americas) (Alliance 8.7, IPEC+ Flagship Programme)
Ms Nadine OSSEIRAN - Senior Programme and Operations Officer (Asia)
Thematic Areas
Ms Kenza DIMECHKIE - Project Manager (FAIR III Programme)