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Results 11,108 resources
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Rebutts Charles Bergquist's critique of historical methods of Latin American labour history, published in the Spring 1990 edition of the journal. Defends "new" labour interpretations of working class experience and class consciousness, although it is acknowledged that some studies were excessively particularistic. Argues that there is no historical norm or law of economic development. Concludes that Bergquist's approach to the study of class consciousness and economic development in Latin America is mistakenly "essentialist," that new social historical methods can be usefully applied, and that comparative studies of labour that include North America or Europe with Latin America are valid.
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The article reviews the book, "The Economics Of Comparable Worth," by Mark R. Killingsworth.
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The article reviews the book, "Irish Emigration and Canadian Settlement: Patterns, Links and Letters," by Cecil J. Houston and William J. Smyth.
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The article reviews the book, "Trade Unions and Socialist Politics," by John Kelly.
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This essay explores the nature of the relationship between police and workers using the 1906 strike of Lethbridge coalminers as a case study. Following a discussion of relevant literature and theoretical frameworks it examines in detail the relationship between the Lethbridge strikers and the Mounted Police. This interaction was extremely complex with each party having an influence on the other. Consequently, no definitive conclusion can be drawn as to the interpretative debate between pluralist theory and class cortflict theory insofar as police-striker relations are concerned.
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Pays homage to the life and work of Margaret Benston, an influential writer on women, science, and technology who taught chemistry, computer science and women's studies at Simon Fraser University, Benston also was a labour activist and helped to found feminist community-music ensembles in Vancouver.
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Industrial relations concepts are synthesized in order to make explicit the underlying values of industrial relations at a particular stage of its development. It is argued that industrial relations' underlying value is the human essence of labor as a commodity or factor of production and labor's right to equity in the employment relationship. Labor's human essence and employment equity are seen as the defining themes of industrial relations. Labor problems arise out of the adverse effects of industrialism on the human condition. Industrial relations' problem-solving aims to ameliorate these effects through applications of the equity principle in the employment relationship. Leading concepts of industrial relations are structured in a sort of logic or sequence of propositions that are summarily stated in the form of a syllabus as an expository device.
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Au-delà du comportement individuel, l'absence s'inscrit dans une dynamique sociale. À partir d'une étude de terrain dans une grande entreprise québécoise, cet article associe le phénomène des absences brèves et autorisées à un modèle de contrôle du travail caractérisé par l'autonomie ouvrière et une relation de coopération sur le plancher de production. La gestion des absences était l'une des composantes de la relation d'échange entre le superviseur et les subordonnés, ce qui permettait d'atténuer les effets de l'absence et d'évacuer toute dimension conflictuelle. De façon générale, l'absence de courte durée représentait toujours une source d'incertitude, mais son effet sur la productivité était très faible.
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The article reviews the book, "Images de l'organisation," by Gareth Morgan.
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The article reviews the book, "Les organisations: une approche systémique," by Yves Bertrand and Patrick Guillemet.
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The article reviews the book, "Profession: consultant," by Robert Lescarbeau, Maurice Payette and Yves St-Arnaud.
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The article reviews the book, "Australian Unions: An Industrial Relations Perspective," by Bill Ford and David Plowman.
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The article reviews the book, "Labor's Flaming Youth: Telephone Operators and Worker Militancy 1878-1923," by Stephen H. Norwood.
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The article reviews the book, "Vingt-cinq ans de pratique en relations industrielles au Québec," edited by Rodrigue Blouin.
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The article reviews two books: "Communications et syndicalisme: des imprimeurs aux journalistes," edited by François Demers, and "Quarante ans de syndicalisme chez les journalistes québécois," by Esther Déom.
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The article reviews the book, "La conciliation dans les conflits du travail," by Le Bureau international du Travail.
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The article reviews the book, "Les règles du jeu. L'action collective et la régulation sociale," by Jean-Daniel Reynaud.
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The article reviews the book, "Paul Robeson, A Biography," by Martin B. Duberman.
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Introduced by Don Wells, the article discusses the unionization and "strike" (in reality, a boycott) of teachers at the Canadian Labour Congress's Canadian Labour College in 1983. Examines the dichotomy of militant trade unionists who become labour bureaucrats, the clash between academics and the CLC, and the pivotal role of students (who were also trade unionists) that mobilized to join the teachers' side in the dispute. Media coverage and the reaction of unions are also discussed. Concludes that the right to organize was the central issue of the conflict, and that, going forward, the college will continue to embody the best and the worst features of Canadian trade unionism. The article was authored by the union's chief negotiator for its first collective agreement.
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