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Full bibliography 13,049 resources
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The article reviews the book, "Discrimination sur le marché du travail et information imparfaite," by Jean-Michel Plassard.
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The article reviews the book, "Les principes de l'équité salariale et les approches dans le secteur public québécois," published by Institut de recherche et d'information sur la rémunération (Montreal).
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This study utilizes discriminant analysis to determine if the characteristics of mediators and the strategies they employ predict the success of mediation in resolving impasses in the public sector in lowa. The data were obtained from questionnaires administered to management and union negotiators in the 214 impasses reported in lowa during 1986. Mediators' characteristics and the strategies they employ are found to predict the success of mediation for both management and union negotiators in lowa during 1986.
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The article reviews the book, "La pensée économique au Québec français. Témoignages et perspectives," by Gilles Paquet.
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The article reviews the book "Hard Bargains: My Life on the Line," by Bob White.
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Sack and Lee (1989) argue that state intervention has become intrusive in Canadian industrial relations. They base their assertions on the increase in back-to-work legislation by provincial and federal governments, the use of wage controls in the public sector in a number of jurisdictions, and statutory criteria imposed on interest arbitrators requiring them to take into account government's ability to pay. They obscure and overlook the positive features of the British Columbia (BC) legislation. The model chosen for dispute resolution in the collective bargaining process has a great deal of merit and clearly does not represent retrenchment in Canadian public policy as Sack and Lee suggest. Indeed, the experience with a similar approach in Ontario suggests that the model chosen in BC may meet some of the very concerns about state intervention articulated by Sack and Lee. Thus, the BC approach to dispute resolution should be examined and evaluated with an open mind.
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The article reviews the book, "Beyond the Vote: Canadian Women and Politics," edited by Linda Kealey and Joan Sangster.
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The article reviews the book, "Ecological Imperialism: The Expansion of Europe, 900-1900," by Alfred W. Crosby.
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The article reviews the book "Caring By The Hour: Women, Work, and Organizing at Duke Medical Center," by Karen Brodkin Sachs.
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For the purposes of this review, labour studies is defined to encompass various disciplinary approaches, but, in general, this essay focuses on studies of the working class, not just of the labour movement, and material which places the working class in historical perspective. --From authors' introduction
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The article reviews the book, "Madeleine Parent, Léa Roback, Entretiens avec Nicole Lacelle," by Nicole Lacelle.
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The article reviews two books, "Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshorement, and Unionism in the 1930s," by Bruce Nelson, and "Work on the Waterfront: Worker Power and Technological Change in a West Coast Port," by William Finlay.
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The article reviews the book, "The World of Our Mothers: The Lives of Jewish Immigrant Women," by Sydney Stahl Weinberg.
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The article reviews the book,"Continuity, Chance, and Change: The Character of the Industrial Revolution in England," by E. A. Wrigley.
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The article reviews the book, "The People of Sonora and Yankee Capitalists," by Ramón Eduardo Ruiz Urueta.
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The article reviews the book, "Labor Law and Business Change: Theoretical and Transactional Perspectives," by Samuel Estreicher and Daniel G. Collins.
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The article reviews the book, "Mouvement Populaire et Intervention Communautaire de 1960 à Nos Jours: Continuités et Ruptures," by Louis Favreau.
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Briefly summarizes the conference, "Making Connections, Workers and Their Communities," held at York University on May 26-28, 1989. Mary DeVan related her doctoral research on Filipino domestic workers in Vancouver, Margaret Oldfield and Belinda Leach adddressed low-paid clerical and garment workers (including the methodological challenges of researching the latter) whose workplace is the home, and Sedef Arat-Koç commented on a recently published paper [entitled "In the Privacy of Our Own Home: Foreign Domestic Workers as a Solution to the Crisis in the Domestic Sphere of Canada"] on the political economy of the relationship of the state to domestic service. Concludes that a holistic approach to women's work including a new commitment to labour-community organization is necessary to uncover the reality of women's invisible household labour.
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The article reviews the book, "Comprendre et appliquer une convention collective," by Ronald Sirard and Alain Gazaille.
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