Everyone has the right to choose their work and to a living wage, as defined by law, as well as the right to form and join a union and to participate in the activities and programs of a union, including the right to strike and to collective bargaining.
Andrea Cervera says
I believe that the right to work and decide the work that will ensure a living wage is also related with the conservation of the environment. Approximately, more than 200 million people, both directly and indirectly, are employed and depend in fishing activities. Therefore governments, civil society and the population itself should be aware and be active actors in the conservation of the environment and in this case, the seas, in order to sustain their current economic activities while ensuring that their populations have enough food provided by the oceans as a main source of proteins and are able to make a living from it.
Kirk Boyd says
A key part of Article 13 is the right to a “living wage.” Capitalism works so well that a living wage can be established. No one who is working should live beneath the poverty line.