The ILO's maritime labour convention

As a unified standard providing wide coverage on seafarers’ rights and decent working conditions, MLC 2006 is expected to have far reaching impacts on the global maritime industry. Although it is regarded as the “fourth pillar” of the international regulatory regime along with MARPOL, SOLAS and STCW...

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Main Author: Wang, Xujie.
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44886
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-448862023-03-03T17:23:13Z The ILO's maritime labour convention Wang, Xujie. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Teh Kong Leong DRNTU::Business As a unified standard providing wide coverage on seafarers’ rights and decent working conditions, MLC 2006 is expected to have far reaching impacts on the global maritime industry. Although it is regarded as the “fourth pillar” of the international regulatory regime along with MARPOL, SOLAS and STCW, the role MLC 2006 will play is much more important since it is the only convention dealing with the crew’s conditions on board. Being at the forefront of the global maritime industry and a world renowned port, Singapore will definitely be affected by the implementation of MLC 2006 in various ways. Therefore, it is of crucial importance for the shipping industry in Singapore to appreciate the potential impact of implementation of this convention. The objective of this research project is to evaluate different impacts across the shipping industry brought by the enforcement of this convention. Mainly through interviews and surveys, the research team acquired views and insights from the three main parties involved in the implementation process of MLC 2006, namely: ship owning and management companies, Flag and Port authority (MPA) and seafarer’s unions. Besides the combined information and results, each report of the research team will focus on one party and demonstrate the findings separately. This report concentrates more on the views of the seafarers’ unions. After interviewing qualitative respondents from 15 organizations representing the three main parties, the research team found that the shipping community in Singapore is well aware of MLC 2006 and all parties have been devoting efforts to cope with the potential impact. However, it will only be after the regulatory authority initiates the implementation of the convention and sets out clear directions, that the shipping industry will be able to successfully integrate the MLC 2006 into daily operations. Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies) 2011-06-06T08:32:03Z 2011-06-06T08:32:03Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44886 en Nanyang Technological University 53 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business
Wang, Xujie.
The ILO's maritime labour convention
description As a unified standard providing wide coverage on seafarers’ rights and decent working conditions, MLC 2006 is expected to have far reaching impacts on the global maritime industry. Although it is regarded as the “fourth pillar” of the international regulatory regime along with MARPOL, SOLAS and STCW, the role MLC 2006 will play is much more important since it is the only convention dealing with the crew’s conditions on board. Being at the forefront of the global maritime industry and a world renowned port, Singapore will definitely be affected by the implementation of MLC 2006 in various ways. Therefore, it is of crucial importance for the shipping industry in Singapore to appreciate the potential impact of implementation of this convention. The objective of this research project is to evaluate different impacts across the shipping industry brought by the enforcement of this convention. Mainly through interviews and surveys, the research team acquired views and insights from the three main parties involved in the implementation process of MLC 2006, namely: ship owning and management companies, Flag and Port authority (MPA) and seafarer’s unions. Besides the combined information and results, each report of the research team will focus on one party and demonstrate the findings separately. This report concentrates more on the views of the seafarers’ unions. After interviewing qualitative respondents from 15 organizations representing the three main parties, the research team found that the shipping community in Singapore is well aware of MLC 2006 and all parties have been devoting efforts to cope with the potential impact. However, it will only be after the regulatory authority initiates the implementation of the convention and sets out clear directions, that the shipping industry will be able to successfully integrate the MLC 2006 into daily operations.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Wang, Xujie.
format Final Year Project
author Wang, Xujie.
author_sort Wang, Xujie.
title The ILO's maritime labour convention
title_short The ILO's maritime labour convention
title_full The ILO's maritime labour convention
title_fullStr The ILO's maritime labour convention
title_full_unstemmed The ILO's maritime labour convention
title_sort ilo's maritime labour convention
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44886
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