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This article reviews "Organizations : Structure and Process" by Richard H. Hall.
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This article reviews "Questionnaire d’auto-évaluation du travail en équipe" by Solange Trudeau-Massé.
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This article reviews "The Canadian Labour Market, Readings in Manpower Economics" by Arthur Kruger and Noah M. Meltz.
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Analyzes the failure of the One Big Union as well as the historical literature.
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This article reviews "Collective Bargaining in Government (Readings and Cases)" by J. Joseph Loewenberg and Michel H. Moskow.
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This article reviews "Collective Bargaining in Public Employment and the Merit System" from the U.S. Department of Labor.
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Dans cette étude l'auteur décrit, analyse et critique les trois rondes de négociation que le Québec a connues dans le secteur public. Il en tire certaines conclusions générales.
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This article reviews "Report of the Royal Commission on Labor Legislation in Newfoundland and Labrador" by Maxwell Cohen and Joel Bell.
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Recording of addresses given by activists Anne Boylan and Jean Rands on the topic of women's involvement in trade unions for the Alma Mater Society's women's studies program. --Website description
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Journalists and poets, economists and political historians, have told the story of Canada's railways, but their accounts pay little attention to the workers who built them. The Bunkhouse Man is the only study devoted to these men and their lives in construction camps; a pioneering work in sociology, it is still the best description of what it was like to be a working man in Canada before the First World War. E.W. Bradwin drew on his own experience as an instructor for Frontier College, working alongside his students during the day and teaching at night, to present this graphic portrait of life in the camps from 1903 to 1914. No detached observer, Bradwin played a vigorous role trying to improve the lot of the men--practicing the sociology of engagement advocated by radical sociologists today. Work camps have existed in Canada from early pioneer times to the 1970s and are unlikely to disappear. In the years of Bradwin's study there were as many as 3,000 large camps employing 200,000 men, 5 per cent of the male labour force. Like the settling of the prairies, these camps are a characteristic Canadian phenomenon, but they have never drawn comparable attention. The republication of The Bunkhouse Man, with an introduction by Jean Burnet, makes available once more a work essential to the exploration of Canada's history and social structure. --Publisher's description
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This article reviews "Structures et pouvoirs de la Fédération des Travailleurs du Québec;" by Paul Bernard.
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This study is concerned with the development of Winnipeg's socialist movement in the 1900 to 1915 period. It will focus on this small segment of the city's labor movement. It is evident that the mainstream of Winnipeg socialism was involved with the trade union movement both in terms of dual membership and political activity. The exception to this occurred in the four years from 1904 to 1908, when Winnipeg's Socialist Party of Canada local was involved neither in cooperative nor in independent municipal and provincial politics. It existed as a set of some 150 dogmatic Marxist propagandists awaiting the inevitable collapse of the capitalist system. The dominance of this group was short-lived, and the Winnipeg socialists reaffirmed their faith in the democratic-liberal traditions of the British working-class movement. Those European immigrants who became involved in the city's socialist movement after 1907 only helped strengthen this tradition, for their leadership preferred the parliamentary approach of the socialists in Germany to the uncompromising dogmatism of the Socialist Party of Canada.... From author's introduction.
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The Ontario Longitudinal Study of Aging 1959-1978 interviewed 1,214 male employees at ages 48 and 54 on attitudes towards retirement, a suitable retirement age and views on not working. Replies at both ages are examined as well as some of the conditions which may have influenced attitudes towards retirement at age 54. Chi-square analysis indicated more employees were favourably disposed to retirement at age 54 than at the earlier age. Income level alone, of four factors studied, was positively related to attitudes towards retirement.
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L'abondante littérature sur la rentabilité des investissements privés en éducation, quoique très informative sur les effets économiques ultimes de ces investissements, nous renseigne très peu sur l'importance des aspects économiques de l'éducation dans les décisions privées des étudiants de s'instruire. Le but de la recherche décrite dans ce texte est de tracer les liens entre la demande privée pour l'éducation et les taux de rentabilité attendus par les étudiants d'école secondaire au Canada au début des années 1960.
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This article reviews "La négociation collective en France" by Gérard Adam, Jean-Daniel Reynaud and Jean-Maurice Verdier.
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This article reviews "The Imperfect Union, A History of Corruption in American Trade Unions" by John Hutchinson
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This article reviews "L’enquête par questionnaire : manuel à l’usage du praticien" by Claude Javeau.
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In this paper, the author focuses on analyzing and explaining the widespread emergence of « non-institutional response ».
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