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« L'inspection du travail en France en 1998. les chiffres clés » de Collectif, La Documentation Française, 2000 « L'Inspection du travail », Bureau international du travail, 2000; Gérard Lyon-Caen et Jacques Pellissier, Droit du travail, Dalloz, 1996; Marie-Thérèse Join-Lambert, Politiques sociales, Presses de Sciences-Po et Dalloz, 1997
The Direction Générale du Travail (DGT) is a department of the French government, attached to the Ministry of Labor.The DGT's mission is to coordinate and direct labor policy in order to improve collective and individual relations and working conditions in companies, as well as the quality and effectiveness of the law governing them.
The position was originally known as Minister of Labour (Ministre du Travail), created in 1906, and later, Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions (Ministre du Travail et Prévoyance sociale). After its 1906 creation, the Inspection du travail (IT, Labour Inspection) service was integrated to it. [1]
ILO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. Unlike other United Nations specialized agencies, the International Labour Organization (ILO) has a tripartite governing structure that brings together governments, employers, and workers of 187 member States, to set labour standards, develop policies and devise programmes promoting decent work for all women and men.
The Bourse du Travail concept has been central to Anarcho-syndicalists across the globe, and the model greatly influenced Council communism and other forms of left communism. Anarchists of many stripes point to the Bourse du Travail as an example of a directly democratic, small scale federalist institutional structure.