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Arbitrage d'un différend entre la Ford Motor Company of Canada Limited et l'Union Internationale des United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America {U.A.W.-C.LO.)
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If, as Sir Wilfrid Laurier said, the twentieth century would be the century of Canada, by the end of the first decade of the new century it was already apparent that it would not be the century of the Canadian working man. The twentieth century ushered in the great Canadian boom.The twentieth century ushered in the great Canadian boom. And boom conditions produced a boom psychology. Nothing could stop Canada. Incredible industrial expansion; two new transcontinental railways pushing across the West; seemingly unstoppable floods of capital and immigrants pouring into the country; these were the hallmark of the decade. Indeed, everyone seemed to be prospering. Everyone, that is, but the Canadian worker. To him the twentieth century ushered in no new changes - or at least, no changes for the better. His conditions of work were still appalling, and his wages--though somewhat higher--could not keep up with spiralling living costs. Indeed, the influx of hundreds of thousands of hungry, penniless immigrants even made it difficult to hold a job. And what jobs? Stuffy, unventilated factories; sixty hours a week; back-breaking work; all for a dollar a day. These were the conditions of work for the men, women and children of Canada. And a dollar a day was considered excellent pay for the thousands of boys and girls, some not yet in their teens, who were forced to find jobs. --Introduction
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The Communist Party in Canada is the first thorough study of a political party whose limited size and position outside the mainstream of politics have not lessened its impact and the interest it has aroused among Canadians for over sixty years. Drawing on Communist sources in several languages, Ivan Avakumovic outlines the party's ups and downs from its origins at the turn of the century through to the present day, traces its connects with the American and Russian Communist parties, and describes its internal organization, its policies and tactics, its attitude to the rest of the left wing and other political parties, to labour groups, police, and the general public. Here is an objective, scholarly description, with appeal for the historian and the general reader. --Publisher's description
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The Marxian System [of economics] has been universally proclaimed to be dynamic. It is therefore of some importance to discover that the analytical framework is static, that it cannot be modified easily, and that it has led to a very wrong conclusion which has been embedded in Marxian thinking. --Author's introduction
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In this paper, the author concludes that the collective bargaining model will be able to preserve the most vital features of the intellectual community.
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This article reviews "Le management d’aujourd’hui, Savoir organiser, Savoir décider" by Gérald Lefebvre.
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This article reviews "Motivation and Commitment" by Dale Yoder and Herbert G. Heneman.
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This article reviews "Effective Situational Diagnosis : A Programmed Learning Text Based on the 3-D Theory" by W.J. Reddin and R. Stuart-Kotze.
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This article reviews "How to Manage by Objectives" by John W. Humble.
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This article reviews "Les relations de travail à l’usine" by Renaud Sainsaulieu.
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