Yankee come back? Occupational safety and health reform in Mexico
Washington College of Law, American University - Washington
2001
55 p.
compensation of occupational accidents ; dangerous work ; framework agreement ; information system ; institutional reform ; occupational safety and health ; penal sanction ; pregnant women ; prevention ; social reform ; training ; compliance
Health and safety legislation
English
Bibliogr.
"In the past decade, Mexico has been the site of serious reform in occupational safety and health law. The article aims to describe these reforms, raise questions about their implications, and provide preliminary assessments. It describes the health and safety legal framework, including workplace safety committees, and outlines several possibly beneficial reforms: improved notice-and-comment standard-setting; enhanced penalties; compliance certification by private firms; enhanced employer due process rights in inspection and penalty procedures; and sharpened experience rating for workers' compensation premiums. The article also raises conerns over several aspects of Mexico's post-reform system: weaknesses in whistleblower protection; avoidance of first-infraction penalties; lack of rights to refuse dangerous work, and others. "
Digital
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