Monday 9 October 2006 (ILO/06/44)
GENEVA (ILO News) - The International Labour Organization today called
for nominations for the first "ILO Decent Work Research Prize",
to be awarded annually to an individual for their outstanding contribution
to the advancement of knowledge about the ILO's central goal of decent
work for all (Note 1).
Created by the ILO's International Institute for Labour Studies, the
prize will be awarded for the first time during the next International
Labour Conference in June 2007 in Geneva. The deadline for receipt of
candidatures has been set on 31 December 2006.
The prize can be awarded for major specific publications or a lifetime
contribution to knowledge on the central concerns of the ILO, including
job creation, rights at work, social protection and social dialogue.
The laureate will be selected by a jury of five eminent international
experts in labour and social policy issues.
Candidates can be nominated by individuals and institutions, including
governments, workers' and employers' organizations. Only individuals
qualify as candidates. They must have the support of at least one representative
of the ILO's tripartite constituency and one leading academic in the
area of labour and social policy coming from different regions of the
world.
The winner will be invited to give a lecture to a global audience of
government, employer and worker representatives, and be made Honorary
Fellow of the International Institute for Labour Studies for 2007-2008.
The prize carries an honorarium of US$ 10,000.
The International Institute for Labour Studies (IILS) was established
by the ILO in 1960 as a centre for advanced studies in the social and
labour field to further a better understanding of labour issues through
education and research.
For more information, please see: www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inst/download/nom.pdf