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Labor Management Relations

The document summarizes key provisions regarding labor-management relations in the Philippine Constitution and Labor Code. The Constitution provides for the full protection of labor, employment equality, workers' rights to organize and strike, security of tenure, and participation in decision-making. It also promotes shared responsibility between workers and employers and voluntary dispute resolution. The Labor Code establishes the state policy to promote free collective bargaining, trade unionism, and voluntary arbitration for settling disputes, as well as fostering an organized labor movement and workers' rights.

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Roan Villalobos
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
162 views

Labor Management Relations

The document summarizes key provisions regarding labor-management relations in the Philippine Constitution and Labor Code. The Constitution provides for the full protection of labor, employment equality, workers' rights to organize and strike, security of tenure, and participation in decision-making. It also promotes shared responsibility between workers and employers and voluntary dispute resolution. The Labor Code establishes the state policy to promote free collective bargaining, trade unionism, and voluntary arbitration for settling disputes, as well as fostering an organized labor movement and workers' rights.

Uploaded by

Roan Villalobos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Labor Management Relations

Posted in Frequently Asked Questions

Article XIII Sec. 3 of the Philippine Constitution on Labor-Management


Relations, at a Glance:
a) Full protection to labor, local and overseas, organized and unorganized;
b) Full employment and equality of employment opportunities for all;
c) Right of all workers to:

self-organization, collective bargaining and negotiations;


engage in peaceful concerted activities, including the right to strike in accordance with law;

security of tenure, humane conditions of work and a living wage; and

participate in policy and decision making processes affecting their rights and benefits as may
to provided by law;

d) Promotion of the principle of shared responsibility between workers and employers;


e) Preferential use of voluntary modes in setting disputes, including conciliation.
f) Recognition of the right of labor to its just share in fruits of production; and
g) Right of enterprises to reasonable return of investment and to expansion and growth.

Article 211 of the Labor Code, as amended by R.A. 6715, on the State Policy
on Labor Relations:
a) To promote and emphasize the primacy of free collective bargaining and negotiations, including
voluntary arbitration, mediation and conciliation, as modes of settling labor or industrial disputes;
b) To promote free trade unionism as an instrument for the enhancement of democracy and the
promotion of social justice and development;
c) To foster the free and voluntary organization of a strong and united labor movement;
d) To promote the enlightenment of workers concerning their rights and obligations as union
members and as employees;
e) To provide an adequate administrative machinery for the expeditious settlement of labor or
industrial disputes;

f) To ensure a stable but dynamic and just industrial peace; and


g) To ensure the participation of workers in decision and policy-making processes affecting their
rights, duties and welfare.

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