Organizations
Informal workers are increasingly forming or joining organizations to fight for their rights, enhance their bargaining power, increase their economic power and improve their livelihoods. Their membership-based organizations take many forms: trade unions, cooperatives, informal associations or self-help groups.
They are increasingly recognizing that combining forces can amplify their visibility, voice and power. Their organizations are doing this by uniting into federations and networks nationally, regionally and globally.
Forms and Extent of Organizing
Because the majority of MBOs of informal workers tend to be local, small and fragile, they are often not visible – but they exist in surprisingly large numbers. For information on over 500 of the many informal workers’ organizations around the world, see the WIEGO Organization and Representation Data Base (WORD). WORD is continuously being updated and new entries and information are being included.
There is a wide range of organizational forms. At a primary level you will find democratic MBOs of informal workers, including unions, various types of association, self-help groups, cooperatives, networks, through to hybrid organizations with mixed membership, organizations in transition from a group within an NGO/CBO to an independent MBO, and those NGOs working with informal workers and so on. Some organize as women and workers, others begin organizing as migrant communities and then as workers. Some start to organize around savings and credit, or religious affiliation, and move on to become unions or worker associations. For more detail on membership-based organizations, see Chen et al., 2007, Membership-Based Organizations of the Poor.
Read the report from the MBO Workshop in March 2011: “Organizing Informal Workers: Building and Strengthening Membership-Based Organizations.”
The largest union of informal women workers is the Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA), a trade union of over 1.1 million women informal workers in India. It is a trade union that struggles to improve the rights and working conditions of workers, and has also formed over 100 cooperatives – united into a federation – to promote economic and livelihood develop and self- sufficiency. For more information, see SEWA’s profile as an Institutional Member of WIEGO.
International Networks
Awareness of the need to build stronger, more visible and more powerful informal worker organizations has grown over the past 15 years or so. This in turn has fostered a growing number of national, regional and global networks, federations or alliances, some formal and some still developing and operating informally.
HomeNets
HomeNet International was formed in the early 1990s around the struggle for an ILO Convention on Homework. Although Homenet International did not survive, two sub- regional HomeNets were subsequently founded: HomeNet South Asia, and HomeNet South East Asia. Both these networks are currently composed of country HomeNets, which are a mix of MBOs and NGOs. They focus on policy advocacy, sharing experiences, supporting and helping to build the capacity of their affiliates.
StreetNet International
In 2002 StreetNet International was launched. Before that, in 1995, the first international meeting on Street Vendors resulted in the Bellagio Declaration and in 2000 the StreetNet Association was set up, paving the way for the launch of StreetNet International. StreetNet International is made up of democratic street vendor organizations or organizations with substantial street vendor membership. It encourages the formation of, and affiliation by, national associations or alliances.
Latin American Network of Waste Pickers
The Red Latinoamericana de Recicladores (Red Lacre), or Latin American Network of Waste pickers, is a network that brings together waste picker organizations – primarily cooperatives and cooperative federations/associations – from 15 countries. The organizations work together to improve the working conditions of waste pickers and promote dialogue and exchanges between waste pickers in different countries.
Global Alliance of Waste Pickers
Since the First World Conference, held in Bogota in 2008, waste pickers have strengthened their global connections, especially between Latin America, India and Africa. They have formed an interim Steering Committee and developed a global programme of activities. (For more, see the Waste Picker Networks page.)
International Domestic Workers Network (IDWN)
The IDWN was initiated at the first international conference of domestic workers and supporters in 2006. It was formed in 2008 with its organizational base in the IUF and supported by WIEGO. It is led by an all-women Steering Committee composed of representatives from domestic workers’ organizations in Latin America, Asia, Africa, North America and Caribbean, and more recently from Europe. For more, see the International Domestic Workers’ Network page.
National and Local Organizations
There is a diverse range of organizations and networks that are organizing informal workers with differing strategies, within and outside of the formal trade union movement. The following are examples with links to more information:
Alliance of Indian Wastepickers (AIW)
This national network consists of 35 organizations working with, and/or comprised of, waste pickers and/or itinerant buyers with a presence in 22 cities. Their focus is on peer support, advocacy, and cross-learning. Read the August 2011 AIW newsletter.
General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions (GEFONT)
A trade union national centre in Nepal, GEFONT has several affiliates organizing informal workers such as domestic workers, home-based workers, vendors, and transport workers. See profile.
Ghana Trades Union Congress
This trade union national centre has taken a lead in promoting the organization of informal workers into unions and, with its affiliates, developing new organizing strategies. See profile.
HomeNet Thailand
This is a national network of NGOs and MBOs of and working with home-based workers in different regions of Thailand. See profile.
Kagad Kach Patra Kashtakari Panchayat (KKPKP)
A trade union of waste pickers in Pune, India, KKPKP has developed innovative strategies to improve the lives of its (mainly women) waste picker members. See profile.
National Association of Street Vendors of India (NASVI)
A national network of street vendor associations and unions in India, NASVI was instrumental in negotiating a national street vendor policy. See profile.
Pambansang Kalipunan ng mga Manggagawang Impormal sa Pilipinas (PATAMABA)
Based in the Phillipines, PATAMABA is a national organization of informal workers, mainly home-based workers. See profile.
For more links to profiles, please visit the WORD Data Base.
The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) posts news and articles that contains valuable information on organizing informal workers, and interviews with unions organizing informal workers.
