The Council of Europe has provided legal instruments to define common European social security standards. In addition to the European Social Charter, these valuable tools are the European Code of Social Security, its Protocol and the European Code of Social Security (revised). These international standard-setting conventions can be used for orientation in the reform process going on in many European countries, especially in central and eastern Europe. They require states to alter the substance of their social security systems. They may have to change the amount of benefit or length of the qualifying period.
 

A series of minimum standards

The underlying idea of these instruments is to promote a social security model based on social justice. They represent a series of minimum standards. They do not call for the full standardisation (or ‘unification’ as it is sometimes called) of the national social security systems. Standardisation would require all the contracting parties to provide the same benefits to the same categories of their population at the same rates and under the same conditions. Instead the Code, Protocol and Revised Code recognise the desirability of harmonising the level of social security in member states and therefore establish minimum requirements. If states wish to provide more than the minimum they are free to do so.

The Code, Protocol and Revised Code also respect the diversity and individuality of the national social security systems. All social security systems are different, they are the product of the distinctive social, political and economic traditions of the states in which they have evolved. The provisions of the Code, Protocol, and Revised Code represent goals for every member state of the Council of Europe. They explain what must be achieved but leave every state to determine how it will be achieved. The goals are designed in such a way that they can be applied to all types of social security system, whether entitlement is based on employment, specific categories of occupations, the whole economically active population or upon residence.
 

Supervisory procedure

A supervisory procedure is established and it demands that the contracting parties prepare reports concerning their compliance with the standards provided within the Code, Protocol and Revised Code. Since January 2012, the International Labour Organisations' (ILO) conclusions related to the monitoring of compliance with the European Code of Social Security are now examined by the Governmental Committee of the European Social Charter and the European Code of Social Security who report in turn to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe. The Committee of Ministers determines if the contracting party has fulfilled its obligations. If the contracting party has failed to uphold the standards to which it has committed itself then the Committee of Ministers can make Resolutions inviting the contracting party concerned to rectify the situation and respect its international obligations.
 

Governmental Committee of the European Social Charter and the European Code of Social Security
Resolutions 2023 of the Committee of Ministers (adopted on 6 September 2023)


These specialized social security instruments form an essential component of the protection of human rights through the Council of Europe.

Indietro Reinforcing social rights protection in Europe: to achieve greater unity and equality

Expert seminar
Reinforcing social rights protection in Europe: to achieve greater unity and equality

The Department of the European Social Charter organised, under the auspices of the French Presidency of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, an expert seminar to discuss the protection of social rights in Europe so as to achieve greater unity and equality. The seminar also followed up on the Committee of Ministers declaration at its Helsinki session in May 2019. At that session, the Committee of Ministers invited all the member States concerned to consider signing and ratifying the revised European Social Charter and its Additional Protocol providing for a system of collective complaints, as a starting point for a resolutely proactive and collective drive to combat inequalities and achieve greater social justice.

The European Social Charter and the European Committee of Social rights guarantee key principles such as free movement of persons, non-discrimination, legal and social security, protection against poverty and exclusion, access to decent housing, health, education and training, as well as employment, safety at work and equality at the workplace, including equal pay.

Participants were welcomed by Ambassador Jean-Baptiste Mattéi, Ambassador of France to the Council of Europe, and Gabriella Battaini-Dragoni, Deputy Secretary General of the Council of Europe. An introduction on strengthening social rights to ensure social justice, national cohesion and the rule of law was pronounced by José Fernandez-Albertos, Researcher at Institute for Policies and Public Goods, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC).

The seminar was organised in liaison with the “Institut de recherche Carré de Malberg”, University of Strasbourg.

Strasbourg, France 19/09/2019
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Department of Social Rights

Directorate General of Human Rights and Rule of Law
Council of Europe
1, quai Jacoutot
F – 67075 Strasbourg Cedex

Tél. +33 (0)3 90 21 49 61

www.coe.int/socialcharter

@CoESocialRights

 

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