Published 5/21/2026, 12:00:00 PM · Updated 5/22/2026, 6:02:05 PMBy TheBriefWire Editorial Team
Key points
By 10 votes to four, the UN World Court ruled “the right to strike of workers and their organizations is protected” under the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87).
The Court, however, stressed that its opinion did not define the exact scope of the right to strike.
Its conclusion, the judges said, “does not entail any determination on the precise content, scope or conditions for the exercise of that right.” The case was referred to the Court by the ILO’s Governing Body in November 2023, after years of disagreement among the agency’s core constituents – governments, employers and workers – over whether Convention No. 87 protects the right to strike, even though the treaty does not explicitly mention strikes.
Heart of the dispute At the heart of the dispute was whether the right to organize under Convention No. 87 includes the right...
Published May 21, 2026.
Quick Summary
By 10 votes to four, the UN World Court ruled “the right to strike of workers and their organizations is protected” under the Freedom of