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Report

24 Jul 2020

Author:
Maria da Graça Prado, Engineers Against Poverty

Changing The Game: A critical analysis of labour exploitation in Mega Sport Event infrastructure projects

Labour abuse seems to have become the ‘normal’ practice in the implementation of Mega Sport Events (MSEs). Tight deadlines and a multitude of infrastructure projects to be completed risk worker welfare to the point that, in recent times, virtually all events have been accompanied by fatalities on site and severe human rights violations. Although good practices exist and are implemented by delivery authorities and civil society organisations, bidding regulations provided by sports organisations contain deadly oversights. A redesign of MSE bidding rules is paramount to breaking this cycle of abuse. There are several other key components to creating a fair game in MSEs: capacity building platforms to develop workers’ skills for long-term employability, ring-fenced payments from project owners to the workforce to avoid wage delays, multi-stakeholdermonitoring systemsto ensure health and safety standards during construction, accessible grievance channels to deal with labour issues in a prompt manner,a clearly defined system of liability and a commitment from bidders to abide to International Labour Organization (ILO) labour standards.

Part of the following timelines

Engineers Against Poverty release analysis of rights abuses associated with Mega Sport Events

EAP report exposes the corruption risk behind Mega Sporting Events, offers recommendations based on transparency & collaboration

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