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Cet article rend compte d'une expérience d'évaluation d'un programme de formation offert à l'intention de propriétairesdirigeants de PME québécoises par le ministère de l'Industrie, du Commerce et de la Technologie de la province. La recherche utilise le modèle de Kirkpatrick qui propose d'évaluer un programme déformation selon quatre niveaux distincts: réactions, apprentissage, comportements et résultats. Deux cent quatre-vingt-un participants ont été rejoints par téléphone au moins un an après la tenue de leur séminaire. L'étude documente d'une façon descriptive les différents niveaux d'impact du programme de formation. Elle apporte un éclairage nouveau sur une opération rarement effectuée qui présente de nombreuses difficultés d'ordre théorique et opérationnel.
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During the past decade, Canada has experienced a disturbing rise in the number of long-term unemployed workers. The 2-stage Heckman procedure is used to evaluate the impact of training programs targeted to the long-term unemployed. The major finding is that females clearly benefit from these programs in terms of both employment stability and weekly earnings. Females who complete training are estimated to work an additional 11 weeks annually and earn an extra C$47 a week. The results for males are not encouraging, with negative estimates for employability and weekly earnings. It appears that these programs should be increasingly targeted to women, given their superior post-program labor market success. It is also shown that private employer placements are extremely effective training devices. Many trainees make a sufficiently good impression that they are taken on as regular employees.
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Presents a comparison of the National Industrial Conferences of the US and Canada which were held in 1919 for the purpose of making postwar labor-management relations more harmonious. While the Armistice of November 1918 halted fighting between nations in "the war to end all wars," industrial "warfare" between labor and capital soon erupted in many countries of the world. In 1919, the U.S. and Canada both experienced a higher level of strike activity than ever before. The outbreak of widely publicized general strikes in Seattle and Winnipeg even caused some Americans and Canadians to believe that revolution might be in the offing.' Faced with this turmoil, the heads of government in the U. S. and Canada sought to achieve peace by calling upon the warring parties in industry to send representatives to National industrial Conferences whose purpose was to achieve a consensus about how to make postwar labor-management relations more harmonious. Months before either the U.S. or Canadian governments convened their National Industrial Conferences, the British government had successfully utilized what David Lloyd George described as a "Peace Congress" of employer and trade union representatives to help cairn postwar labor unrest in Great Britain.
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In the study of industrial relations (IR), a growing preoccupation with managerial strategies has been accompanied by 2 related developments: 1. a growing integration of the human resources management (HRM) literature into the study of IR, and 2. a movement away from the deterministic approach characterizing much IR research in the 1970s. These developments suggest a normative shift. Two assumptions seem to underly this shift. A critique of these assumptions is developed, arguing that underlying sources of conflict inherent to work organizations and employment relations limit the effectiveness of progressive policies and practices and that the extent to which these policies and practices are economically rational and hence likely to be adopted varies in accordance with firm and industry-level structural variables. Survey data collected in 1980-1981 from 100 unionized firms in Canada are used to explore the effectiveness of and structural variation on progressive managerial practices.
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The article reviews the book, "Factory Girls: Women in the Thread Mills of Meiji Japan," by E. Patricia Tsurumi.
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After nearly 2 decades on the side lines, European level collective bargaining is back on the industrial relations agenda. To a large extent, the resurgence of this notion can be attributed to the impact of the European Community's (EC) 1992 integration program on European economic and political life. For all the activity going on, it appears unlikely that EC-wide collective bargaining will come to play a significant role in industrial relations in the near future. There are 2 main dimensions to European collective bargaining: 1. the vertical dimension, which covers attempts to get greater collaboration and dialogue between trade unions and employers inside the institutional framework of the EC, and 2. the horizontal dimension, which includes developments at the enterprise and market levels aimed at promoting trade union or employer contact outside the confines of the nation state. If market completion leads to new regulatory arrangements within the EC, the social partners may be obliged to engage in meaningful discussion about collective bargaining.
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The article reviews the book "R.C.M.P. Security Bulletins: The War Series 1939-1941," edited by Gregory S. Kealey and Reg Whitaker.
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The article reviews the book, "Syndicats, salaires et conjoncture économique," by André Beaucage.
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Suite à l'implantation de la CAO/F AO dans la compagnie Marconi Canada, une mesure de l'impact du changement sur la qualité de vie au travail (QVT) a été réalisée auprès de 104 utilisateurs de la nouvelle technologie. La QVT dans cette étude est perçue dans son sens le plus large englobant les dimensions du travail en soi, des conditions de travail, de la santé et la sécurité au travail et du contexte organisationnel. L'approche retenue pour mesurer les impacts est subjectiviste et ceux-ci sont différenciés, s'il y a lieu, selon la catégorie occupationnelle, le taux d'utilisation de la nouvelle technologie et la formation reçue en CAO/FAO.
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The article reviews the book, "Le vieillissement au travail, une question de jugement!," edited by Hélène David.
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The article reviews the book, "Comparable Worth: Analyses And Evidence," by Mark R. Killingsworth and M. Anne Hill.
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The article reviews the book, "Labor Relations In Europe: A History Of Issues And Developments, by Hans Slomp.
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The article reviews the book, "Union Jack: Labour Leader Jack Munro," by Jack Munro and Jane O'Hara.
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The article reviews the book, "The Arrogance of Race: Historical Perspectives on Slavery, Racism and Social Inequality," by George M. Fredrickson.
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The article reviews the book, "Canadian Volunteers: Spain 1936-1939," by William C. Beeching.
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