The European Committee of Social Rights monitors compliance with the Charter under two separate procedures:

The collective complaints procedure was introduced by the Additional Protocol providing for a system of collective complaints  adopted in 1995 and which entered into force in 1998.

The aim pursued with the procedure was to increase the effectiveness, speed and impact of the implementation of the Charter. The collective complaints procedure has strengthened the role of the social partners and non-governmental organisations by enabling them to directly apply to the ECSR for rulings on possible non-implementation of the Charter in the countries that have accepted its provisions and the complaints procedure.

The collective complaints procedure is a human rights protection system for social and economic rights which complements the judicial protection provided under the European Convention on Human Rights for civil and political rights. Because of their collective nature, complaints should raise questions in general, concerning non-compliance of a State’s law or practice with one or more of the provisions of the Charter. Complaints about individual situations may not be submitted. Because of its particular nature, complaints may be lodged without exhausting domestic remedies and without the complainant organisation necessarily being a victim of the alleged violation.  

Organisations entitled to lodge collective complaints: 

Furthermore, any State may grant representative national non-governmental organisations (NGOs) within its jurisdiction the right to lodge complaints against it. So far only Finland has done so.


If a complaint has been considered admissible by the ECSR, the grounds of the complaint are then examined and a decision on the merits is adopted by the ECSR. This decision establishes whether a State’s law and/or practice is or not in compliance with one or more provisions of the Charter. The decision is forwarded by the ECSR to the parties and, for the purpose of its follow-up, to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe. The decisions adopted by the ECSR are published and can be consulted in the European Social Charter Database HUDOC.

The Charter is a legally binding treaty of international law and the ECSR as a treaty body has sole responsibility for making the legal assessment of state compliance with the Charter. The Committee’s jurisprudence (decisions and conclusions) represents an authoritative interpretation of the Charter’s provisions. States Parties’ have an obligation to cooperate with the Committee and its decisions and conclusions that arises from the application of the principle of good faith to the observance of all treaty obligations. For States Parties to ignore or not take into account the Committee’s decisions and conclusions would be to fail to show good faith in implementing the obligations they have undertaken to be bound by in terms of the Charter.

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Back Foreign Affairs Ministers adopt decisions on social rights in Turin

Foreign Affairs Ministers adopt decisions on social rights in Turin

Foreign Affairs Ministers of the Council of Europe’s 46 member states held their annual session on 20 May 2022 in Turin (Italy).

As regards social rights, the Committee of Ministers, recalling its decisions adopted at its 131st Session (Hamburg, 21 May 2021) and the Declaration adopted on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the European Social Charter (18 October 2021):

  • welcomed the follow-up action taken by its Deputies in the spirit of the Turin process for the European Social Charter on improving the Charter system;
  • acknowledged the valuable contribution made by the Secretary General and the organs of the Charter, namely the European Committee of Social Rights and the Governmental Committee of the European Social Charter and European Code of Social Security;
  • confirmed its commitment to improve constantly the implementation of social rights and underlined the need to embrace good democratic governance by promoting dialogue with the social partners and civil society;
  • approved the proposals outlined in the report on improving the efficiency and impact of the European Social Charter system (CM(2022)67-final);
  • instructed its Deputies to adopt the operational decisions required to implement, already in 2023, the reform of the European Social Charter system;
  • invited its Deputies to report at the 133rd Session of the Committee of Ministers on the state of the reflection on longer-term substantive and procedural issues relating to the European Social Charter.

Karin Lukas declared: “As President of the European Committee of Social Rights, I welcome the efforts of States Parties to the European Social Charter to make the implementation of social rights under the Charter more effective. The Committee has made several proposals in this regard, some of which were included in the current reform process. However, reducing the reporting burden for states will only strengthen social rights if that goes together with a constructive and social rights-focused dialogue between the national authorities and the supervisory organs of the Charter. This can only be achieved if this work receives the resources needed, which is currently not the case. Council of Europe member states should translate into practice the “resolve to ensure that the Charter system is given the political support and the tools and means required to ensure its effectiveness” they expressed on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Charter”. In their declaration on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Charter, the Committee of Ministers characterised the European Social Charter as a unique and precious international law instrument.

The session provided also the opportunity for ministers to discuss the aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, to review the state of human rights, democracy and the rule of law on the basis of the annual report of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Marija Pejčinović Burić. Moreover, the ministers took decisions on the work of the Organisation in areas such as children’s rights, migrant, refugee and asylum-seeking women and girls, artificial intelligence and cybercrime, freedom of expression, combatting hate speech, human rights and the environment, participation of civil society organisations and national human rights institutions.

Turin, Italy 20/05/2022
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Council of Europe
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www.coe.int/socialcharter

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