Your search
Results 2,168 resources
-
This article reviews the book, "Mine Mill: The History of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers in Canada Since 1895," by Mike Solski and John Smaller.
-
If unionism is not performing the equity fonction, another way will be found to ensure equilibrium in industrial relations. The author examines how management and the State have acted as substitutes.
-
Managements' drive for the removal of contractual and govemmental restraints on their control of the work force is rationalized in Western Europe as necessary to achieve greater internal and external competitiveness. In support of this view the OECD substituted the advocacy of a flexible manpower policy (including wage policy) under the euphorie title of 'positive adjustment policy' for the prior program of an active manpower policy promoted during the sixties and early seventies. The soundness of the arguments for this change in policy has been questioned by internal research findings as well as reports by consultants and special expert groups appointed by the organization. These studies call for a package of policies and measures negotiated between management and unions to realize the ultimate ends of manpower mobility and job security. The free labor market cannot by itself serve as the mechanism for realizing these goals. Employment security and not segmentation of the work force should be the objective of joint policy making.
-
L'auteur commente la décision du Comite de la liberté syndicale touchant divers aspects du cadre juridique des relations du travail dans le secteur public au Québec: le niveau de la négociation collective, les restrictions apportées à l'exercice du droit de grève et la détermination des services essentiels.
-
This article reviews the book, "Black Milwaukee: The Making of an Industrial Proletariat 1915-1945," by Joe William Trotter Jr.
-
This article reviews the book, "Le projet d'entreprise," by Luc Boyer & Noël Equilbey.
-
This article reviews the book, "Negotiation : Theory and Practice," by J.A. Jr. Wall.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Gold Collar Worker," by Robert E. Kelley.
-
This article reviews the book, "British Workplace Industrial Relations 1980-1984 : The DE/ESRC/PSI/ACAS Surveys," by Neil Millward & Mark Stevens.
-
Les auteurs vérifient, auprès d'employés d'un Centre local de services communautaires, l'hypothèse de la prédominance du mode de vie sur la crise du travail.
-
Le nouveau contexte dans lequel s'inscrit le fonctionnement des relations professionnelles présente aux partenaires et aux pouvoirs publics une série de défis qu'ils doivent affronter. L'auteur se propose d'évoquer diverses questions à partir de l'expérience de VOIT et de donner quelques indications sur les perspectives que l'Organisation s'efforce de tracer et de proposer.
-
This article reviews the book, "Labor in Latin America: Comparative Essays on Chile, Argentina, Venezuela, and Colombia," by Charles Bergquist.
-
Describes the project to digitize the manuscript industrial schedules from the 1871 Canadian census. Presents two tables of industrial-related data from Ontario centres as examples of historical research.
-
This article reviews the book, "Code du travail du Québec (Législation, Jurisprudence et Doctrine)," by Pierre Laporte & d'Hélène Ouimet.
-
L'auteur interroge la déontologie de la profession, ses moyens de mise en œuvre et ses difficultés d'application.
-
L'auteur présente une discussion des principaux concepts utilisés en relations industrielles et examine si la façon de présenter les connaissances en ce domaine est basée sur la réalité concrète.
-
The purpose of this paper is to explore the underlying personality, dynamics, values and elements of job motivation which characterize workers identifying themselves to one of Driver's four career streams from three different perspectives i.e. career to date, probable career and ideal career.
-
This paper seeks to examine the extent to which the writing of the history of both women and of the Canadian working class has converged over the last ten years, to suggest other ways in which integration of the two could be sought, and also to suggest some basic conflicts between the paradigms of each which point to areas where integration seems unlikely. It argues that if the goal of writing a history of the totality of the working class is a shared one, areas of intersection between the two fields must be consciously sought out. New ways of integrating the history of women and of the working class must be sought. For a start, this requires a reconceptualization of the way we define the working class and work, examination of the processes of class reproduction, and acknowledgement of the importance of examining how gender definitions are transmitted, shaped and reshaped.
-
This article reviews the book, "Virage à gauche interdit. Les communistes, les socialistes et leurs ennemis au Québec 1929-1939," by Andrée l.evesque.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Literature of Labour: Two Hundred Years of Working-Class Writing," by H. Gustav Klaus.