Your search
Results 2,301 resources
-
This article reviews the book, "The Making of Labour Law in Europe - A Comparative Study of Nine Countries up to 1945," by Bob Heppel.
-
This article reviews the book, "L'organisation du travail," by Michel Paquin.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Future of Work: A Guide to a Changing Society," by Charles Handy.
-
This article reviews the book, "La struttura organizzativa del movimento sindicale, Dalle origini al 1949," by Maurizio Ricci.
-
Bob White, president of the Canadian Auto Workers, is without a doubt the single most influential figure in the Canadian labour movement. Respected by workers and business leaders alike. White has become a major voice in national; affairs. All his life he has bargained hard, and more often that not, won.
-
This paper examines the case of the United Papermakers and Paperworkers in the province of Quebec and its conflict with the provincially centered Federation nationale des travailleurs de la pulpe et du papier Inc.
-
This article reviews the book, "Pensions Policy in Britain: A Socialist Analysis," by Eric Schragge.
-
This article reviews the book, "Chaos on the Shop Floor: A Worker's View of Quality, Productivity and Management," by Tom Juravich.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Politics of Work in The West: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives," by Harley Dickenson & Robert Russell, edited.
-
This article reviews the book, "Peasant, Lord, and Merchant: Rural Society in Three Quebec Parishes, 1740-1840," by Allan Greer.
-
This article reviews the book, "Longshoremen: Community and Resistance on the Brooklyn Waterfront," by William DeFazio.
-
The author analyzes the impact of the International Labour Organization 's Freedom of Association Standards on Canadian labour legislation in the last decade.
-
This article reviews the book, "On the Job : Confronting the Labour Process in Canada," edited by Craig Heron and Robert Storey.
-
Daniel Drache has moved me to do what I have always avoided: respond to those who have distanced themselves from the interpretive direction of what they almost uniformly refer to as "the new labour history". The appearance of his article, "The Formation and Fragmentation of the Canadian Working Class: 1820-1920", in Studies in Political Economy no. 15 (Fall, 1984) - supposedly a socialist review that has, in the past, offered Marxist labour histories a warm, if critical, reception - was, for me, the last straw. --Author's introduction
-
English/French abstracts of articles in the issue.
-
English/French abstracts of articles in the issue.
Explore
Resource type
- Book (76)
- Book Section (2)
- Encyclopedia Article (1)
- Film (3)
- Journal Article (2,168)
- Report (1)
- Thesis (50)