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Full bibliography 13,056 resources
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This paper deals with the workplace implications resulting from the incidence of AIDS for employers, AIDS victims, and coworkers of AIDS virus sufferers in North America. It discusses myths and misconceptions about AIDS as well as the medical facts and the legal aspects of the AIDS controversy. It examines the role of human resource management specialists in handling AIDS concerns, such as testing job applicants, terminating employees with the AIDS virus, developing educational programmes, and writing policy statements. Finally, it makes recommendations on how to effectively deal with the AIDS crisis in workplace settings.
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This article reviews the book, "Making Mondragon : The Growth and Dynamics of the Worker Cooperative Complex," by William Foote White & Kathleen King Whyte.
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Du milieu de 20e siècle, les gouvernements québécais et Canadian ont resserré le contrôle du travail des enfants. Cet article tente de retracer l'effet de la loi des allocations familiales de 1945, de la loi de fréquentation scolaire obligatoire de 1943 et de la loi des familiales et la main-d'œuvre en général, sur les valeurs des parents et les normes publiques. Il avance que les lois ont eu le recul du travail des enfants dans la province, mais d'une façon que l'État n'esceuptait pas. Plus que les gouvernants, à leur compte les nouveaux droits des enfants euchâssés dans ces mesures, pour permiettre à leurs fils et à leurs filles d'aller plus longtemps à l'école.
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This article reviews the book, "Employment in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe," by Jan Adam.
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The article reviews the book, "Proletarian Peasants: The Revolution of 1905 in Russia's Southwest," by Robert Edelman.
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The article reviews the book, "Working Class Formation: Nineteenth-Century Patterns in Europe and the United States," edited by Ira Katznelson.
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The article reviews the book, "The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine," by Robert Conquest.
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The article reviews the book, "Leisure, Sport and Working Class Cultures," by Hart Cantelon, Robert Hollands, Alan Metcalfe, and Alan Tomlinson.
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The editor notes that various aspects of women's work are explored in the special issue. Also noted is the article on historical researchers' use of Privacy Act, including issues arising from Access to Information and Privacy Acts. The editor updates on his own experiences in this regard.
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From its inception in 1919-1920 the Royal Canadian Mounted Police security service compiled periodic reports on "subversive" activity in Canada, which were circulated to the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Through use of Canada's Access to Information legislation Gregory S. Kealey and Reg Whitaker have acquired copies of the extant Bulletins, which are now held by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service....This volume covers the early years of World War II when the Communist Party of Canada was illegal and many CPC leaders were interned. --Publisher's description
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This paper discusses four commonly debated approaches to American labor and human resource policy and argues for the most ambitious of these.
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The article reviews the book, "Les Chinois à Montréal, 1877-1951," by Denise Helly.
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The article reviews the book, "A Short History of the International Worker's Holiday, 1886-1986," by Philip S. Foner.
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Il existe une difficulté majeure de recrutement de main-d'oeuvre de production qualifiée dans les PME québécoises. Ce texte expose les résultats d'une étude visant à mieux comprendre ce problème dans le sous-secteur de la machinerie. Les auteurs ont vérifié auprès de propriétaires-dirigeants quelques hypothèses relatives aux circonstances et au degré d'intensité de cette difficulté managériale. Plusieurs facteurs concourent à l'existence de cette dernière, mais le degré d'originalité du produit fabriqué par l'entreprise et le niveau de formation-expérience exigé dans son recrutement paraissent déterminer grandement l'ampleur du défi de trouver un personnel spécialisé adéquat.
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The article reviews the book, "Cent ans de solidarité. Histoire du CTM, 1886-1986," by Conseil des Travailleuses et Travailleurs du Montréal Métropolitain.
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The article reviews the book, "Guide des archives des Unions internationales à Montréal," by Jean-François Cardin and Jacques Rouillard.
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The article reviews the book, "Histoire de la Fédération des travailleurs du papier et de la forêt (CSN), Vol. 1: 1907-1958," by Gilbert Vanasse.
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Takes note of forthcoming conferences, calls for papers, and a query regarding BC labour activist Robert Raglan Gosden.
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Takes note of forthcoming conferences and calls for papers. Reports that Elaine Bernard has left Simon Fraser University for a position at Harvard. Also reports on the Labour Archives Bulletin of the Canadian Association of Archivists, the deposit of records of the Trades Union Congress at the University of Warwick library, a United Farmworkers' boycott, and ways to support for the strike for a first collective agreement at Oxford University Press in Toronto. The editor re-issues a query for information (first published in the previous volume) regarding Robert Raglan Gosden (1881-1961), a BC labour activist who during the early 20th century was also a police spy.
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The labour and socialist movement of British Columbia before World War One was home to a number of competing tendencies and factions. While the different groups could and did work together on occasion, their relations with each other were often marked by hostility and suspicion. The Vancouver free speech fights of 1909 and 1912 illustrate dramatically the in-fighting between the Socialist Party of Canada. the Industrial Workers of the World, and the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council. The different approaches of the organizations to the issue of free speech reflect their different ideologies, constituencies, and clans strata, and the actions of the SPC suggest that the party was, despite its impossiblist rhetoric, more interested in pragmatic trade unionism and social democracy than revolution. In refusing to put its faith in parliamentary democracy, the IWW demonstrated that it had a more consistent and deeper analysis of capitalist society than moat historians have suggested, but this very analysis and the actions consistent with it meant the IWW could be increasingly marginalized and isolated. (English)
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