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This article reviews the book, "The Origins of the American Business Corporation, 1784-1855; Broadening the Concept of Public Service During Industrialization," by Ronald E. Seavoy.
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This article reviews the book, "Perpetual Motion," by Graeme Gibson.
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This article reviews the book, "Royal Blue: The Culture of Construction Workers," by Herbert A. Applebaum.
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Changements dans les legislations du travial au Canada.
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Changements dans les legislations du travail au Canada.
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Changements dans les legislations du travail au Canada.
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Cet article cherche à caractériser l'expérience des comites de sante et de sécurité du travail par rapport à certains des objectifs importants à l'origine.
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This article reviews the book, "Ambivalent Friends: Afro-Americans View The Immigrant," edited by Arnold Shankman.
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This article reviews the book, "Worker Capitalism. The New Industrial Relations," by Keith Bradley & Alan Gelb.
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This article reviews the book, "Labor's War at Home: The CIO in World War II," by Nelson Lichtenstein.
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This article reviews the book, "Making the Second Ghetto: Race and Housing in Chicago, 1940-1960," by Arnold R. Hirsch.
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This article reviews the book, "Miners, Millhands and Mountaineers. Industrialization of the Appalachian South 1880-1930," by Ronald D. Eller.
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Base sur une recherche réalisée en 1983, cet article examine les facteurs économiques, institutionnels, juridiques et technologiques qui ont favorise le développement du travail à domicile dans l'industrie du vêtement au Québec. Il propose des moyens pour contrôler ce type de travail.
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This article reviews the book, "Green Gold: The Forest Industry in British Columbia," by Patricia Marchak.
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This paper examines two basic conceptual flaws in H. Clare Pentland's influential history of the early Canadian working class, Labour and Capital in Canada, 1650-1850. First, Pentland's eclectic use of Marxist, staples thesis, and Weberian approaches makes for a fundamentally incoherent treatment of the subject. Second, focusing on "labour" (that is, waged labour) and "capital," Pentland neglects the central features of Canada's pre-capitaiist social formations: features such as the household economy of production and direct consumption, which had little to do with waged labour or capital. Because his understanding of pre-capitalist society is so defective, Pentland is unable to deal adequately with the transition to capitalism.
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The purpose of this paper is to analyse the time pattern of male-female wage différentials with a view towards determining whether or not equal pay legislation has narrowed the male-female wage gap.
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The filmmakers were given remarkable freedom to record the historic 1984 contract negotiations between the United Auto Workers and General Motors Corporation. Bob White, labour leader of the Canadian branch of the UAW, must also confront his American counterpart from Detroit and succeeds in arriving at a contract that is significantly Canadian. His members had already given him a mandate to fight for independence from the American union. This is an invaluable document for anyone interested in the complexities of United States-Canada relations. It's an extraordinary film about revolutionary events. --NFB website description
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The worldwide depression prostrated the British Columbia economy in the early 1930s. Production levels dropped and industry stagnated. Unemployment became a pressing problem, and as jobless from throughout Canada rode the trains to the warmer climes of British Columbia's Lower Mainland there was fear that British Columbia was becoming "just a blamed resort for all the hoboes in Canada." Vancouver was inundated with unemployed workers and became the focus of agitation as the job-less organized demonstrations, tag days, and parades in order to gain the ear of governments and improve their circumstances. ... In interior centres, where the climate was much less kind, the jobless also launched an attack on the established order. In the Prince George district unemployed workers, led by communists, pressed the local government for higher relief payments, organized demonstrations and parades, initiated strikes in relief camps and at work projects, and even entered the political arena in the 1933 provincial election under the banner of the United Front. --Introduction
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