Tag Archives: IUF Asia Pacific

Global/Asia-Pacific: Psychosocial hazards at work: Why collective action Is essential

Psychosocial Hazards at Work: Why Collective Action Is Essential

Published: 27/04/2026

Editorial by Dr Hidayat Greenfield, IUF Asia/Pacific Regional Secretary

As unions mark International Workers’ Memorial Day on April 28, occupational safety and health must be understood in its full sense. The most widespread dangers workers face today are not only physical—they are psychosocial. Addressing them must become a central part of the trade union agenda.

ILO Convention No.155 on Occupational Safety and Health (1981) was recognized as a fundamental convention in 2022 and is now one of the ILO’s core labour standards. As such it applies everywhere to all workers regardless of whether governments have ratified the convention or not. It is a fundamental workers’ right – a human right.

But safety cannot be limited to physical protection. It must include freedom from psychological harm caused by how work is organized and managed.

Psychosocial hazards arise from the social context of work. They are rooted in the organization of work, systems of work, technologies, and the attitudes and behaviours of managers, supervisors, customers, and coworkers. While the effects are psychological, including stress, anxiety, depression, and loss of self-esteem, the causes are not personal. They are social.

This distinction is critical. It means that psychosocial hazards must be identified and addressed at their source. It also underlines the central role of unions in prevention.

Across the Asia Pacific region, union organizing has highlighted several key psychosocial hazards.

Precarious employment creates continuous uncertainty and insecurity. Contract workers, workers on standby, and workers employed through labour contractors experience constant anxiety about income, debt, and whether they will have work in the future. This inability to plan ahead is mentally and physically exhausting. It is debilitating. In addition, practices such as nepotism and abuse in hiring and rehiring deepen vulnerability and expose workers, especially women, to exploitation and harassment.

Piece rate wages, quotas, and performance targets generate excessive stress. In agriculture, failure to meet quotas leads directly to poverty wages and debt and has been identified as a driver of child labour. In hotels, excessive room quotas have been exposed as a major source of injury and illness. Across sectors, individual performance appraisal systems tied to wages increase surveillance, abuse of authority, and vulnerability to bullying and harassment. Targets are often constantly changing and influenced by favouritism, leading to demoralization, loss of motivation, and depression. Fear is central. Fear of not earning enough, fear of losing employment, and fear of being blamed all contribute to significant mental stress.

Continuous restructuring has created a work environment of ongoing uncertainty. Automation, digitalization, and new technologies, including algorithmic management, further increase stress and uncertainty. Workers face changing roles, unclear job descriptions, and increased responsibilities without recognition or reward. Self supervision and self reporting shift responsibility and blame onto individual workers, increasing stress and exhaustion. At the same time, there is a failure to address the long-term impact of this uncertainty on younger workers.

Behaviour-based safety has become a dominant approach to occupational safety and health. It places responsibility on individual workers rather than on employers and governments. As a result, psychosocial harm is treated as an individual mental health issue. Solutions such as counselling and wellbeing programs shift attention to workers’ attitudes and personal circumstances while leaving workplace hazards unchanged. This isolates workers and intensifies stress and anxiety.

In response, workers are organizing. Platform and gig economy workers, including food delivery riders, have formed unions to demand transparency, accountability, and protection from psychosocial harm.

The key role of unions is to use collective bargaining to shape how work is organized, ensure transparency in new technologies, and secure fair workloads, job security, and protection from harassment and discrimination. This is not about stopping change, but about assessing its impact, regulating its pace, ensuring training and support, and minimizing stress and anxiety while protecting workers’ health and dignity.

Collective action is essential. It transforms individual experiences of anxiety and stress into shared action and builds workers’ confidence that psychosocial hazards can be eliminated.

If unions fail to address psychosocial hazards, they risk losing relevance, especially among younger workers. By confronting these root causes and organizing around them, unions can strengthen their role and rebuild power.

On this International Workers’ Memorial Day, addressing psychosocial hazards at work must be a union priority. It is fundamental to protecting workers’ health, dignity, and rights.


This editorial is based on a presentation (in English) to the ITUC Asia Pacific webinar in commemoration of International Workers’ Memorial Day.

On this International Workers’ Memorial Day, addressing psychosocial hazards at work must be a union priority.

Dr Hidayat Greenfield, IUF Asia/Pacific Regional Secretary

Psychosocial Hazards at Work: Why Collective Action Is Essential

Asia Pacific/Philippines: On April 28 Fishworkers Solidarity remembers commercial tuna fishing workers lost at sea

On International Workers’ Memorial Day, April 28, the IUF-affiliated Fishworkers Solidarity, a member organization of SENTRO, remembered the commercial tuna fishing vessel workers who died or who were “lost” at sea and remain unaccounted for.

Among those remembered on April 28, were workers on tuna fishing vessels who died at sea but whose death was not considered a workplace death. This includes Perfect Aldo who died onboard on January 10, 2020, Arnel Abada who died at sea from pneumonia on June 12, 2021, and Noneto Romero who died onboard from cardiac arrest on November 5, 2022.

Perfect Aldo died onboard the tuna fishing vessel on January 10, 2020

Tuna fishworker, Arnel Abada, died at sea from pneumonia on June 12, 2021

Also remembered are those that the commercial tuna industry and authorities simply declare as “missing” at sea. This includes Gerir Rulete, missing since September 3, 2014. After a decade his family still cannot find peace and his death has not been recognized as work-related.

Tuna fishworker Gerir Rulete, “missing” since September 3, 2014

Warren Poncardas has been “missing” since August 21, 2003.  After 21 years his family too cannot find peace. This is another death while working that is not officially work-related.

The families of Roger Maglasang, Carlos Dejillo, Marvin Villaroya, Ricky Longgarit, and Roy Maglasang were all told that their husbands, fathers, brothers were missing at sea on August 24, 2003. Twenty-one years later, they remain unable to bury their loved ones; unable to declare them dead. As a result, their families are denied the certainty – the truth – that they died while working at sea. They are also denied the insurance they are entitled to for the work-related deaths of their loved ones.

Along with Gerir Rulete and Warren Poncardas, Roger Maglasang, Carlos Dejillo, Marvin Villaroya, Ricky Longgarit, and Roy Maglasangare are among the Unknown Workers killed and forgotten by an irresponsible and reckless commercial tuna industry.

On April 28, Fishworkers Solidarity called for urgent action by the government, employers and the commercial fishing industry to take responsibility for the health and safety of fishworkers throughout the tuna industry and to save lives.

The full text of the statement is below:

Fishworkers’ Solidarity Stands United on International Workers’ Memorial Day: Remember the Dead, Fight for the Living

International Workers’ Memorial Day, 28 April 2024 

Fishworkers’ Solidarity reaffirms its commitment to honoring the memories of those who have lost their lives in the pursuit of their livelihoods, while steadfastly advocating for the safety and well-being of all workers in the fishing industry.

This solemn day serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by countless individuals who have tragically lost their lives due to occupational hazards and unsafe working conditions. From treacherous waters to inadequate safety measures, fishworkers often face perilous situations in their daily endeavors to provide sustenance for communities worldwide.

Today we remember the countless number of fishworkers who were lost out in the sea and remain “missing”. This year alone, we have identified at least 8 fishworkers who are considered “missing”, and that’s just for General Santos and the Saranggani Bay area alone. One wonders, do our government even keep track of these things?

We stand in solidarity with those who continue to endure hazardous working environments and demand accountability from stakeholders responsible for ensuring workplace safety. With the guiding principle of “Remember the Dead, Fight for the Living,” Fishworkers’ Solidarity underscores the urgent need for comprehensive reforms to prioritize the safety and rights of fishworkers everywhere.

This International Workers’ Memorial Day, Fishworkers’ Solidarity calls upon governments, employers, and industry leaders to:

Fully realize the our aspiration for “responsible fisheries and sustainable development” by enhancing the full participation of fishworkers in the whole decision-making process related to fishery resources.

Stop all proposals to amend the Fisheries Code and instead focus all government resources, including that of the non-government sector, on the a whole-of-government, full and effective implementation of the present provisions of the amended Fisheries Code to address illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing including the full implementation of the vessel monitoring system, with data provided to local governments and enforcement agencies.

Enhance safety regulations and enforce stringent measures to prevent accidents and fatalities in the fishing industry.

Provide adequate training, resources, and protective gear to empower fishworkers to carry out their duties safely.

Foster collaborative initiatives between stakeholders to address systemic issues and promote a culture of safety and respect within the industry.

Recognize the invaluable contributions of fishworkers to global food security and uphold their fundamental rights to fair wages, decent working conditions, and social protection.

Together, let us honor the memory of those we have lost by advocating for meaningful change and ensuring that no worker faces unnecessary risks in the pursuit of their livelihood.

Fishworkers’ Solidarity remains unwavering in our commitment to safeguarding the lives and dignity of all fishworkers, today and always.

Through collective action and advocacy efforts, we strive to address the challenges facing fishworkers and promote sustainable practices in the fishing industry. Join us in our mission to create a safer and more equitable future for all fishworkers.

Asia/Pacific: Remembering the unknown workers

In the call to stop the killing on International Workers’ Memorial Day, April 28, IUF Asia/Pacific argues we must also remember the workers whose injuries and deaths are not recognised or recorded as they fall through the gaps.

Read the full article in English, Hindi, Indonesian and Bengali.

Hindi 28 अप्रैल: अज्ञात श्रमिकों को याद करना

 

April 28: Remembering the unknown workers [IUF Asia/Pacific]

IUF Asia/Pacific remembers and speaks powerfully for those workers who die in silence – whose deaths go unreported and unrecognised. Workers who die without justice for themselves or their families:

“For every worker who dies of a long term illness caused by or exacerbated by work – sometimes years after retirement – her or his death is not recorded as work-related. An unknown death of an unknown worker, unrecorded. Every worker who dies in an unreported industrial “accident” is another unknown death. For every worker not considered a worker by legal definition and excluded in employment statistics, she or he dies in silence.

“In our continued call to stop the killing on International Workers’ Memorial Day, April 28, we must also remember the workers whose injuries and deaths are not recognized or recorded as they fall through the gaps.”

Read the full article

Asia-Pacific: IUF video message – Remember the dead and fight for the living on International Workers’ Memorial Day

28 April message from the of the global food and farming union IUF’s Asia Pacific region Regional Secretary . Continue reading Asia-Pacific: IUF video message – Remember the dead and fight for the living on International Workers’ Memorial Day