Trade unionists and stories beyond labour rights
Trade Unionists and Stories Beyond Labour Rights
1. At a Glance
- Trade unionists are not merely wage-negotiators; historically they have been frontline actors in anti-colonial movements, democratic transitions, environmental justice campaigns, and political accountability. [S4]
- The ILO recognises Freedom of Association (Convention No. 87, 1948) and Right to Collective Bargaining (Convention No. 98, 1949) as fundamental rights — forming the bedrock of worker political agency beyond pure wage disputes. [S1]
- In South Asian contexts (India, Sri Lanka), trade union leaders have served as barometers of ground-level political sentiment, often predicting electoral shifts before mainstream commentators. [S5, S6]
- UPSC relevance: GS-I (social movements), GS-II (civil society/governance), GS-IV (ethical leadership), and Essay Paper — themes of grassroots democracy, rights, and civil society.
2. Why in the News
- 1 May 2026 (International Workers' Day / May Day): The Hindu published a feature by journalist Meera Srinivasan profiling Bala Tampoe, General Secretary of the Ceylon Mercantile Union (CMU) for 65 years, exploring how trade union leaders carry political and social histories that far exceed workplace disputes. [S6]
- The article contextualised labour activism within Sri Lanka's democratic politics, military violence against civilian protesters (Weliweriya, 2013), and the 2015 presidential election. [S6]
- Globally, May Day 2026 coverage reignited debates on the shrinking civic space for trade unions and civil society in Asia.
3. Background & Evolution
- 1919: ILO founded under the Treaty of Versailles as part of the League of Nations — the first international body to institutionalise worker rights and tripartism (governments + employers + workers). [S1]
- 1948: ILO Convention No. 87 — Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise. Establishes the right of workers and employers to form and join organisations of their choosing. [S1]
- 1949: ILO Convention No. 98 — Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining. [S1]
- 1951: ILO establishes the Committee on Freedom of Association (CFA) — can examine complaints even from non-ratifying member states. [S1]
- India's trade union movement: Emerged in early 20th century, closely intertwined with the national independence struggle; political unionism defined by ideological affiliation (Gandhian, Marxist, Socialist) was the dominant paradigm post-independence. [S4]
- 1977 (Sri Lanka): Economic liberalisation under J.R. Jayewardene; Bala Tampoe documented this as a systemic attack on labour rights — a pattern replicated across South Asia. [S6]
- Post-1991 (India): Liberalisation accelerated the decline of political unionism; ILO research identifies this as a "paradigm shift" moment requiring unions to re-strategise for informal and gig workers. [S4]
- 2020 (India): Four Labour Codes consolidate 29 central labour laws — a major legislative milestone affecting union recognition, collective bargaining, and strike rights.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Key ILO Instruments | Convention No. 87 (1948), Convention No. 98 (1949) — both "Fundamental Conventions" |
| ILO Supervisory Body | Committee on Freedom of Association (CFA), est. 1951 |
| India's apex body | Ministry of Labour & Employment |
| Central Trade Union Organisations (CTUOs) | 12 recognised nationally (BMS, INTUC, AITUC, HMS, CITU, etc.) |
| Enabling Indian Law | Trade Unions Act, 1926 (amended); now subsumed under Industrial Relations Code, 2020 |
| Ceylon Mercantile Union (CMU) | Sri Lanka; Bala Tampoe, General Secretary for 65 years |
| Hartal of 1953 (Sri Lanka) | Mass general strike; landmark in Ceylon's labour history |
| Weliweriya, 2013 (Sri Lanka) | Army firing on civilians protesting for clean water — used by Tampoe to illustrate militarisation of dissent |
| LSSP | Lanka Sama Samaja Party — Trotskyist party; Tampoe's political disillusionment with it is a case study in unions vs. party politics |
| ILO India project | "Trade Unions for Social Justice" — ILO New Delhi office; focus on 7 project states via Joint Advisory Forums (JAFs) [S3] |
| SDG Link | SDG 8 (Decent Work), SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities), SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, Strong Institutions) [S2] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Trade unions historically served as countervailing power against capital concentration; their decline post-liberalisation has been correlated with rising wage inequality. [S4]
- ILO research shows political unionism in India peaked during the Nehruvian era; its decline post-1991 left large sections of the informal workforce (93% of India's labour force) without organised representation. [S4]
- Collective bargaining in export processing zones (EPZs) is routinely suppressed — a pattern documented by ILO's CFA across Asia. [S1]
Social
- Trade union leaders like Bala Tampoe extended their activism into civil liberties — protesting military violence on civilian protesters (Weliweriya, 2013) — demonstrating unions as civil society actors beyond wages. [S6]
- ILO notes that unions play a critical role in informing informal-sector workers about legal entitlements — wages, social security, working conditions. [S3]
- Gender dimension: Women in the informal sector remain the most underrepresented in formal union structures; ILO's India programmes have specifically targeted this gap. [S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- ILO Convention No. 87 covers the right to form unions without prior authorisation — a principle partially restricted in India's 2020 Industrial Relations Code (which raises the recognition threshold). [S1]
- CFA can examine violations even where a country has not ratified Convention No. 87 — making it a globally binding norm in practice. [S1]
- In India, Article 19(1)(c) of the Constitution guarantees the right to form associations or unions, read with reasonable restrictions under Article 19(4).
- Essential Services Maintenance Act (ESMA) and similar state laws have been tools to suppress strikes — critiqued as incompatible with ILO norms.
Historical
- The role of trade unionists in anti-colonial movements is well documented: in India (AITUC founded 1920, Lala Lajpat Rai as first president); in Ceylon (LSSP and CMU in the independence era). [S4, S6]
- Tampoe's account of the 1953 Hartal situates Sri Lankan trade unionism within a broader anti-imperialist tradition analogous to India's nationalist labour movement. [S6]
- The "beyond labour rights" thesis — that unionists are organic intellectuals of the working class who read political change earlier than elites — finds support in Tampoe's prediction of Rajapaksa's 2015 defeat. [S6]
Ethical / Governance
- Tampoe's critique of the Rajapaksa administration's militarisation of civilian protest illustrates how trade unionists serve as accountability actors for state violence. [S6]
- ILO's tripartite model embeds social dialogue as a governance principle — unions as legitimate voices in policymaking, not just industrial relations. [S2]
- Disillusionment with political parties (Tampoe's break from LSSP) raises the question of union autonomy vs. party capture — a recurrent governance dilemma in Indian labour politics. [S4, S6]
Administrative
- India's 4 Labour Codes (2020) — Industrial Relations Code, Code on Wages, Code on Social Security, Occupational Safety Code — have yet to be fully notified; implementation bottlenecks persist. [Codified knowledge]
- ILO's Joint Advisory Forums (JAFs) in 7 Indian states represent an administrative model for structured tripartite dialogue at state level. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- May 1, 2026: The Hindu publishes May Day feature on Bala Tampoe and CMU — recentring the narrative of trade unionism as political and civic activism. [S6]
- 2024–25: ILO releases research on trade union engagement with SDGs — mapping union activities to SDG 8 and SDG 16 targets; published July 2024. [S2]
- 2025: ILO New Delhi reaffirms focus on reaching youth and gig/platform workers as new frontiers for union organising in India. [S5]
- 2024: India's Labour Codes remain pending full implementation across states — central trade unions have called for rollback of provisions weakening strike rights.
- 2025 (Global): ILO's CFA reported continued arrests and killings of trade unionists in multiple countries — underscoring the physical risks of labour activism beyond the workplace.
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- ILO Convention No. 87 (1948) — Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise — is a Fundamental Convention of the ILO. [S1]
- ILO Convention No. 98 (1949) — Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining — pairs with No. 87 as the core freedom-of-association instrument. [S1]
- The Committee on Freedom of Association (CFA) was established by ILO in 1951 and can examine complaints even from countries that have not ratified Convention No. 87. [S1]
- Bala Tampoe served as General Secretary of the Ceylon Mercantile Union (CMU) for 65 years; associated with the Trotskyist LSSP (Lanka Sama Samaja Party). [S6]
- The Hartal of 1953 in Sri Lanka is a landmark event in South Asian labour history — a mass general strike. [S6]
- Weliweriya incident (2013): Army opened fire on civilians protesting for clean drinking water in Gampaha district, Sri Lanka — at least 3 killed. [S6]
- India's Trade Unions Act, 1926 is the foundational statute; now subsumed under the Industrial Relations Code, 2020. [Codified knowledge]
- India has 12 recognised Central Trade Union Organisations (CTUOs). [Codified knowledge]
- Article 19(1)(c) of the Indian Constitution guarantees the right to form associations and unions. [Codified knowledge]
- ILO's "Trade Unions for Social Justice" project in India operates through Joint Advisory Forums (JAFs) in 7 project states. [S3]
- Political unionism in India is defined by ILO as unionism shaped by ideological and party-political affiliation — a model that peaked in the Nehruvian era and declined post-1991 liberalisation. [S4]
- ILO was founded in 1919 under the Treaty of Versailles — predating the UN by 26 years; became a UN specialised agency in 1946. [S1]
- The AITUC (All India Trade Union Congress), founded 1920, is India's oldest central trade union; Lala Lajpat Rai was its first president. [Codified knowledge]
8. Mains Relevance
| Detail | |
|---|---|
| GS-I | Indian society — Social movements; Role of civil society; Post-independence consolidation |
| GS-II | Governance — Civil society organisations; International bodies (ILO); Fundamental Rights (Art. 19) |
| GS-III | Indian Economy — Labour market; Inclusive growth; Industrial relations |
| GS-IV | Ethics — Moral courage; Whistle-blowing; Public service values (Tampoe as case study) |
| Essay | "Dissent is the oxygen of democracy" — trade union voices as democratic watchdogs |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
- "Trade unionists in South Asia have historically played roles that transcend labour rights, serving as conscience-keepers of democracy. Critically examine with reference to India and Sri Lanka." (GS-I / Essay)
- "Evaluate the impact of the four Labour Codes, 2020 on the right to collective bargaining and freedom of association in India, in light of ILO Conventions 87 and 98." (GS-II / GS-III)
- "Political unionism in India — from its nationalist origins to its decline in the era of economic liberalisation. What does this trajectory reveal about the relationship between labour movements and democracy?" (GS-I)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| ILO Fundamental Conventions & Decent Work Agenda | Core international legal framework for all trade union rights |
| India's Four Labour Codes, 2020 | Domestic legislative overhaul directly affecting union recognition and strike rights |
| Civil Society and Democracy in India | Unions as a subset of civil society — links to Right to Association, RTI, social audits |
| Sri Lanka's Political Economy & 2022 Economic Crisis | Context for understanding CMU / Tampoe's warnings about state authoritarianism |
| Social Movements in Colonial India | AITUC, mill workers' strikes, nationalist-labour nexus — GS-I history |
| Gig Economy & Platform Workers | New frontier where traditional union models struggle — current relevance |
| International Human Rights Law | UDHR Article 23, ICCPR Article 22 — right to form/join trade unions as a human right |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing ILO Conventions 87 and 98: Conv. 87 = Freedom of Association (right to form/join); Conv. 98 = Collective Bargaining (right to negotiate). Examiners often test which convention covers which right.
- AITUC vs. INTUC: AITUC (1920) is the oldest central trade union; INTUC (1947) is affiliated with Congress and was the largest for decades. Do not conflate.
- Bala Tampoe ≠ Indian unionist: He is Sri Lankan (CMU, Colombo) — do not place him in an Indian context.
- Labour Codes not yet fully implemented: As of 2026, states have not fully notified rules under all four Codes — do not state they are "in force" across India without caveat.
- CFA jurisdiction misconception: Students often assume CFA can only act against countries that ratified Conv. 87 — incorrect; CFA jurisdiction extends to all ILO member states regardless of ratification status.
11. Sources
- [S1] International Labour Standards on Freedom of Association — ILO — https://www.ilo.org/global/standards/subjects-covered-by-international-labour-standards/freedom-of-association/lang--en/index.htm — (Tier 2)
- [S2] Trade Union Engagements on the SDGs and Union Revitalization — ILO — https://www.ilo.org/sites/default/files/2024-07/119_web.pdf — (Tier 2)
- [S3] Trade Unions for Social Justice — ILO New Delhi — https://ilo.org/newdelhi/whatwedo/projects/WCMS_448056/lang--en/index.htm — (Tier 2)
- [S4] The Growth and Decline of Political Unionism in India — ILO — https://www.ilo.org/asia/publications/WCMS_143481/lang--en/index.htm — (Tier 2)
- [S5] Trade Unions Need to Strategize to Reach Youth and Vulnerable Workers — ILO New Delhi — https://ilo.org/newdelhi/info/public/fs/WCMS_649893/lang--en/index.htm — (Tier 2)
- [S6] "Trade Unionists and Stories Beyond Labour Rights" — Meera Srinivasan, The Hindu, 1 May 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-05-01/th_international/articleGI2FU33PR-14434617.ece — (Tier 4, primary article)