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full report - UCT - Research Report 2011

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350<br />

pesticide risk management is structured around the United<br />

Nations Code of Conduct on the Distribution and Use of<br />

Pesticides and has been developed in conjunction with<br />

the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organizations.<br />

The first 17 students from all over Africa, Figi and St.<br />

Lucia plan to graduate in 2012. The second intake<br />

represent South Africa, Eritrea, Nigeria, Zambia, Tanzania,<br />

Zimbabwe and Swaziland.<br />

A broad range of students have actively participated<br />

in research projects in the H HRMP both from the<br />

Health Sciences Faculty (SSM, 4th year blocks, MPH,<br />

PhD) and anthropology (undergraduate, honours and<br />

master’s). Students have developed risk communication<br />

tools, and presented findings at conferences and to health<br />

professionals (e.g., Environmental Health Professionals<br />

and Community Health Promoters).<br />

The HRMP also develops a range of risk communication<br />

materials, algorithm, and policy briefs based on research<br />

findings. These mediums are used in order to disseminate<br />

and translate research findings for a broad range of<br />

stakeholders. In <strong>2011</strong>, the Head of HRMP, Dr. Hanna-<br />

Andrea Rother, was nominated as a WHO panel expert<br />

for the FAO/WHO Joint Meeting on Pesticide Management<br />

(JMPM).<br />

industrial health resource group (ihrg)<br />

Within the COEHR, the Industrial Health Resource Group<br />

(IHRG) operates as an action research and socially<br />

responsive development group, providing occupational<br />

health and safety research, curriculum development,<br />

training, advice, and resource development services for<br />

trade unions and their members. The work of IHRG is<br />

guided by a vision of building the capacity of trade unions<br />

and their members to independently monitor, enforce,<br />

defend and advance the workplace health and safety<br />

rights of workers.<br />

IHRG does representation, investigative and advocacy<br />

work for workers and trade unions in relation to workplace<br />

health and safety incidents and cases of work-related<br />

injury and disease. In this regard, IHRG engages<br />

with Department of Labour’s (DoL) Compensation<br />

Commissioner and the Health and Safety Inspectorate, as<br />

well as with the Public Protector. Important experiences<br />

during <strong>2011</strong> and 2012 include IHRG working with Cosatu<br />

to engage the Department of Labour and the NPA on<br />

the DoL recommendations for prosecutions following<br />

their findings of employer negligence in Section 31<br />

investigations and a 32 formal enquiry; the submission of<br />

a Section 91 appeal; and Section 56 applications to the<br />

Compensation Commissioner for increased compensation<br />

due to employer negligence. IHRG continues to engage<br />

the Compensation Commissioner on an incomplete<br />

Section 56 hearing which remains unresolved since <strong>2011</strong>.<br />

IHRG assisted several trade unions with injury cases.<br />

Notable cases include exploring the compensation rights<br />

of labour broker workers injured in an underground tank<br />

fire; engaging the DoL on un<strong>report</strong>ed cases; responding<br />

to requests for assistance on compensation claims<br />

and access to medical surveillance information from<br />

large groups of organised unemployed workers (ex-<br />

Mineworkers and ex-employees exposed to asbestos).<br />

IHRG continues to work closely with the labour federation<br />

Cosatu around cases concerning temporary total disability<br />

payments and permanent disability awards. IHRG supports<br />

workers with medical referrals to occupational health<br />

practitioners, medical specialists, occupational therapists<br />

and psychologists in the process of securing medical care<br />

and evidence in determining whether health problems are<br />

work-related.<br />

IHRG plays an advocacy role within a national, regional<br />

and global context of deregulation, outsourcing and<br />

casualisation of labour - trends which enable public<br />

and private sector employers to avoid responsibility<br />

for workplace health and safety. In this regard, IHRG is<br />

collaborating with the Federatie Nederlandse Vakbeweging<br />

and its South African partners in a campaign for decent<br />

work that is directed particularly at vulnerable workers.<br />

Our work with vulnerable workers currently includes<br />

contract cleaning workers, community health care workers,<br />

workers who have been injured or made sick by their work,<br />

labour broker and sub-contracted workers, and farm<br />

workers. Our advocacy work includes issues relating to<br />

the administration, enforcement and the amendment of the<br />

OH&S legislation, and interpreting the role of trade union<br />

representatives in monitoring employer compliance with<br />

labour laws relating to OH&S.<br />

IHRG works in partnership with trade unions in a variety<br />

of programmes. During <strong>2011</strong>and 2012 IHRG has been<br />

involved with Naledi and Satawu in a project that looks<br />

at the working conditions, organisational rights and<br />

health and safety issues in the contract cleaning sector.<br />

Training workshops and participatory action research<br />

projects have been carried out with contract cleaning<br />

workers at OR Tambo airport. IHRG has also continued<br />

its partnership with Numsa and the German trade union<br />

confederation DGB-BW, to build the capacity of Numsa<br />

shop stewards and organisers to engage with German<br />

multi-national companies in the negotiation of workplace<br />

level organisational rights agreements including Health<br />

and Safety Agreements with their employers.<br />

IHRG collaborates locally, nationally, regionally and globally<br />

with other labour service organisations, non-governmental<br />

organisations, adult educationists, occupational health<br />

experts, various academic programmes, and health<br />

research institutions. During <strong>2011</strong> and 2012, IHRG<br />

collaborated with - amongst others – Public Services<br />

International, Frederick Ebert Stiftung, Federatie<br />

Nederlandse Beweging, Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund,<br />

Naledi, Ditsela, Workers World Media Productions,<br />

<strong>UCT</strong> ReseARCh RepORT '11

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