1. ABOUT CESTRAR
CESTRAR (Rwanda Workers’ Trade Union Confederation) is the most influential National Centre in Rwanda with 17 affiliated Rwandan Trade Unions, with a progressive membership of more than 300,000 workers in different working sectors across the country.
By its own nature and constitution, CESTRAR is an inclusive and non-political organization that only represents and organizes members according to their professions and believes that they should be given the same rights and opportunities regardless of political affiliation, gender, age, disability, religion, etc.
CESTRAR is governed by the National Trade Union Congress, the National Trade Union Council and the National Executive Committee. The National Executive Committee is responsible of the implementation of the decisions taken by the Congress and the General Trade Union Council as well as the representation of CESTRAR at all levels.
1.1. Improving socio-economic conditions of workers in Rwanda.
1.2 Promoting solidarity among workers and involving them in trade union activities.
CESTRAR, as a professional organization of workers, fights for social justice and an equitable redistribution of the national wealth without discrimination.
Our mission is to strengthen unions and provide a unified voice for all workers. We are committed to defending human and trade union rights, creating a healthy and safe working environment, fighting against exploitation and discrimination, promoting decent work and social protection for all.
Solidarity: Workers and trade unionists in particular should work in solidarity and be able to constitute a strong force to achieve vision and mission of CESTRAR.
Commitment: unionists must be committed and engaged to the mission, vision, values, culture and principles of CESTRAR.
Loyalty: Unionist must remain faithful to their commitments, rules, and regulations of CESTRAR
Transparency: CESTRAR and affiliated unions are accountable to their members
2. CONTEXT
The basic insight in the ILO Constitution is that it is through institutions and rules that nations, societies and communities organize themselves, and that labour and employment are fundamental to human economic activity and development. National policies, both for employment and in other areas, depend on these institutions and on the sets of rules developed for their implementation. Institutions complement policies, and economic growth and development are essential to protect and promote human rights, including rights at work and the right to work.
Labour laws aim to protect workers from arbitrary, unfair, or discriminatory actions by their employers (their monopsony power) while addressing potential market failures stemming from insufficient information and inadequate insurance against risk.
In the aftermath of the global economic crisis, the achievement of full, productive and freely chosen employment and decent work remains an elusive goal for many countries. Growing levels of international economic integration in the context of economic and financial globalization have given rise to increased economic volatility, job insecurity, labour market vulnerability and inequality in both developing and industrialized countries. The level of precarious employment remains high in many developing countries.
Ensuring access to productive employment, income opportunities and decent work for all those who are seeking employment remains the most effective pathway out of poverty. However, this is yet to be achieved in many countries in the continuing context of ‘job-poor’ economic growth.
3. RATIONALE
Rwanda has ratified 34 ILO Conventions, which include all the eight (8) fundamental Conventions, two (2) of the four (4) governance Conventions and (22) Technical conventions. Rwanda labour relations are governed and regulated by the Law N° 66/2018 of 30/08/2018 regulating labour in Rwanda and its Application orders.
The Labour law provides fundamental rights, contract of employment, conditions of work, employment duration, works prohibited for children, pregnant and breastfeeding women, remuneration, health and safety at workplace, professional redeployment and employment of the disabled people, employers’ and workers’ professional organizations, labour conventions and internal rules and regulations governing workers, labour disputes, administrative organs, means of control and penalties.
The law was elaborated in the framework of contributing to the creation of favorable labour conditions and protecting the rights and interests of the employees and employers. In order to operationalize this protection, the Ministry of Public Service and Labour in collaboration with various Stakeholders employ various measures in order to enhance the enforcement of labour rights and attainment of Decent Work which include, among others:
Despite all the ratification of international labour standards, establishments of National labour laws and employment of various measures to ensure their enforcement, Rwanda’s labour market still experience labour rights deficits which must be addressed if we are to live up to Global and National aspirations of ensuring decent work for all.
It is worth recalling that right at work is one of four complementing pillars of decent work and failure to achieve any of them, we are definitely failing to achieve decent work as a whole.
It is also important to note that, despite administrative data that would provide some information, so far there is no specific and comprehensive survey or study that can serve as a baseline to inform policymaking and future research.
It is against this background that, through the support of ENABEL under Decent Work and Social Protection Portfolio, CESTRAR has secured funds to conduct Labour Rights and Mapping Study, Integrating Conflicts’ Resolution and is looking to hiring a competent and experienced consultancy firm to perform this assignment.
4. OBJECTIVES OF THE ASSIGNMENT
The mapping study has the following objectives:
5. SCOPE OF WORK
Under this assignment, the consulting firm will respond to the following questions in the framework of conducting a comprehensive study to assess labour rights status in Rwanda:
6. GEOGRAPHICAL SCOPE
The assignment will be performed Countrywide. However, the specific geographical scope will be determined by the inception report, which will be validated by the stakeholders.
7. METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH
The assignment is expected to employ both qualitative and quantitative approaches. On the quantitative aspect, the consultant will collect relevant primary data from the sampled companies and members of tripartite constituents. The consultant will further be expected to collect and analyze other secondary sources of relevant information.
The qualitative component will draw on the understanding and perception of the key stakeholders which will also include sampled companies, employers’ and employees’ organizations as well as Government institutions relevant to the subject matter.
8. DELIVERABLES
The Consultant will deliver the following:
The table below indicates key deliverables to be approved at each stage:
Phase |
Deliverables |
Estimated Man-Days |
DURATION WEEKS |
1. |
Upon Approval of the inception report |
10-man days |
2 Weeks |
2. |
Upon approval of the draft report |
60-man days |
12Weeks |
3. |
Upon approval of the final report |
10-man days |
2Weeks |
Total Duration |
80-Man days |
16 Weeks |
9. DURATION
The assignment is scheduled to take a maximum duration of 4 months equal to one hundred and twenty (120) calendar days, commencing from the date of signing of the contract, with maximum 80 Person days distributed to Key experts’ and Enumerators contribution.
10. REQUIRED QUALIFICATION AND EXPERIENCE
The assignment is open to either national or regional firm and joint venture is encouraged with the following minimum requirements:
The consultancy firm shall have a multidisciplinary team of at least 3 key experts and enumerators as follows:
i. The Lead consultant (Team Leader)
ii. Legal expert
iii. Statistician
iv. At least 8 Enumerators where each should have not less than Bachelor’s degree in any field.
11. ADEQUACY OF THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE TERMS OF REFERENCE, PROPOSED METHODOLOGY AND WORK PLAN IN RESPONDING TO THE TERMS OF REFERENCE
The consultancy firm will interpret the Terms of Reference and indicate the proposed structure and content for each deliverable. This will serve as skeleton and an anticipation of how the consultant envisages the final report to look like. The consultant will also anticipate the expected outputs and activities to accomplish each deliverable.
The deliverables of the assignment complement each other to make the overall objective expected to be achieved. However, each deliverable has its specificity that needs to be addressed specifically. Therefore, the consultancy firm will be required to practically demonstrate specific approaches it will employ to accomplish each deliverable. This must indicate step by step approaches towards effective accomplishment of each deliverable.
For each deliverable, the consultancy firm methods will include but not limited to the following:
The work plan will include the following components:
12. SUBMISSION OF OFFER
The Expression of Interest should contain the following:
Please submit electronically your proposal (technical & financial offer) in two separated emails and should be in PDF files to this email ONLY: cestrartender@gmail.com until latest 30th March 2024.
Done at Kigali, on 28/02/2024
BIRABONEYE Africain
General Secretary
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