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Dans une affaire ou l'intime prétendit que la plainte était frivole et vexatoire, le Conseil après avoir rejeté ladite plainte décide qu'il possède la juridiction nécessaire pour condamner aux frais judiciaires. Considérant sa politique en la matière de même que la jurisprudence d'autres Conseils de relations de travail, le Conseil réitère plus explicitement ladite politique à l'effet de ne pas exercer sa juridiction et décide en l'espèce que rien ne justifie de s'en écarter.
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This article reviews the book, "Histoire de la CSN, 1921-1981," by Jacques Rouillard.
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This article reviews the book, "Le syndicalisme patronal dans la construction," by Michèle Savard Baby.
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This article reviews the book, "The Dynamics of White Collar Unionism : A Study of Local Union Participation," by Nigel Nichloson & Gil Ursell.
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This article reviews the book, "Becoming an O.D. Practitioner," by Eric H. Neilsen.
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This article reviews the book, "Foundations of Organizational Behavior : An Applied Perspective," by Andrew J. Dubrin.
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This article reviews the book, "Worker Militancy and its Consequences," by Sol Barkin.
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This article reviews the book, "Riotous Victorians," by Donald C. Richter.
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This article reviews the book, "Still Ain't Satisfied: Canadian Feminism Today", edited by Maureen Fitzgerald, Connie Guberman, and Margie Wolfe.
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This article reviews the book, "Bibliographie du droit du travail canadien et québecois," by René Laperriere.
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À la suite de la création d'une commission consultative et d'une conférence socio-économique sur le travail devant aboutir à la reforme de Code du travailau Québec l'auteur met en doute la validité de l'approche fragmentaire envisagée.
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This article reviews the book, "La médiation pré-arbitrale en matière de conflits de droits," by the journée d'étude à l'École de relations industrielles.
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This article reviews the book, "Never Done: A History of American Housework," by Susan Strasser.
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To understand the family economy of the working class in the period of early industrial capitalism it is necessary to go beyond a simple consideration of the sufficiency of wages, to put aside the equation of work with wage labour and to examine other ways in which survival could be enhanced. This paper begins an examination of non-wage-based survival strategies. It focuses on animal raising, gardening, the taking in of boarders and house sharing in mid- to late-nineteenth-century Montreal. These particular survival strategies can be ascertained to some extent from people's responses to the census taker. Analysis of their responses as found in the manuscript schedules of 1861 and 1871 constitutes the core of the paper. Professionals and proprietors were most likely to keep cows, the semi- and unskilled pigs. Pigs were outlawed in this period, while cows remained legal. Gardening, too, was largely eliminated on the narrow, densely built lots of the working class. The outlawing of pigs represents one of a complex of changes that, over the length of a generation, severely curtailed the proletariat's access to means of supplementing their wages and altered the contributions a wife and children could make to the family economy.
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This article reviews the book, "Abolition and After the Paper Box Wages Council," by C. Craig, Jill Rubery, Roger Tarling & Frank Wilkinson.
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This article reviews the book, "Theories of Organizations: Form, Process and Transformation," by Jerald Hage.
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This article reviews the book, "Culture and Adult Education: A Study of Alberta and Quebec", by Hayden Roberts.
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This article reviews the book, "Deer Forests, Landlords, and Crofters: The Western Highlands in Victorian and Edwardian Times", by Willie Orr.
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The present study reports on the experiences of a group of 58 former Canadian Admiral employees who enrolled in academic upgrading or retraining programs sponsored by the Federal government. The emphasis is placed on their student role, and expectations for the future, since all were still in retraining.
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In March 1902, 3000 men were in St. John's prepared to go to the ice when rumours of lowered wages precipitated a major strike. The event produced minimal violence and delayed the fleet's sailing for only two days. Nevertheless, it was the only major sealing labour action in the era of the famous "wooden walls" and for the first time some limits were placed on the power of the Water Street merchant elite. Long-range causes involve many aspects of Newfoundland political, social, and economic organization; results included sealing safety legislation and encouragement of the foundation of William Coaker's Fisherman's Protective Union. The article discusses the background, evolution, and significance of the strike.
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Between 1900 and 1999
- Between 1940 and 1949 (372)
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