Noemí Rial was born to a family of Spanishimmigrants that arrived in Buenos Airesat the beginning of the 20th century. Her father, Antonio Rial was an usher at the Teatro Astral. He was also a member of Argentina's Socialist Party. However, in the ‘40s he quit the Party because he believed that it no longer stood for the actual interests of Argentine workers. Her mother, Áurea García, owned a haberdashery and firmly believed in learning as the only way to social ascent. Noemí was born in Buenos Aires, some blocks away from the Argentine National Congress, and spent most of her childhood in the neighborhood. She went to Normal School Nr. 9, “Domingo Faustino Sarmiento”, where she became a normal teacher. At the time, she wanted to be a doctor. However, she finally decided to study in Law School.
During the 60’s, Noemí entered the Universidad de Buenos Aires Law School, and by the end of her studies, she made a thesis on abortion in the ArgentinePenal Code. The 70’s marked the beginning of her interest in politics, as she became a member of Argentina’s Juventud Peronista. In 1972 she became a lawyer and took a teaching position at the Political Law Department, with professors Hernández and Sinigaglia. Two years later, the Department was intervened and its teachers, removed. In March 1976, Hernández y Sinigaglia became two more victims of forced disappearance in Argentina.
Professional Activity
During the military dictatorship, Noemí worked as a full-time lawyer, defending individual workers as well as unions. Soon after democracy returned to Argentina, Noemí resumed teaching at the Department of Labor and Social Security of the University of Buenos Aires Law School, where she has been working for the last twenty years. Since then, she has also taught at different post-graduate schools, not only in Argentina, but also in foreign countries. From 1991 to 1993 Noemí Rial was appointed head of the Legal Department of the Argentine National Administration of Health Insurances. Later on, she also worked as an advisor of former Congressman Roberto Digón, at the Labor Commission of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies. Digón was one of the main opponents to work flexibilization legislation.
Human Rights
On 27 April 1979 ‘The 25’, a group of young trade union leaders that sought to change Argentine trade unionism, called for the first general strike against the Argentine military governmentNational Reorganization Process. The military government’s response was brutal: all trade union leaders involved in the strike were sent to prison. Roberto García, from the taxi driver's union, Roberto Digón from the tobacco employees union and Raúl Ravitti from the Unión Ferroviaria were among those imprisoned. At the time, a young lawyer undertook the defense of the trade union leaders and managed to set them free: it was Noemí Rial.
International Activities
By the mid ‘90s, Noemí Rial became the first Argentine woman lawyer of the Argentine General Confederation of Labour. In 1995 she was chosen representative for the worker's group at the International Labour Organization, a post she held until 2002. From then on, she has been one of ILO's government representatives. Noemí Rial has also been president of ILO’s Committee on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations, and she has had an important role in promoting the re-election of Juan Somavía, the first ILOGeneral Director of South-American origin, and also a supporter of labor as a means of social integration and of social democratic values promotion in South America.