Labor Laws And Unions

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    Managing Employee Relation

    WHAT IS TRADE UNION? Trade union is an organized association of workers in a trade, group of trades, or profession formed to protect and further their rights and interests. In theory, law is by far the most straightforward view of what constitutes an employment to relationship. On its own, however, it is also the weakest of all theoretical perspective. Legally, the employment relationship is expressed by the concept of a contract of service which can be defined as an obligation to work or to be

    Words: 726 - Pages: 3

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    Close Shop

    Outline Thesis: Union Close Shops are economically depressing to the region that they exist in. Evidence 1: Retards economic growth of the region 1. Louisiana and Illinois study Evidence 2: Reduces company competiveness in the national and global market 1. Evidence 3: Reduces private investment 1. Evidence 4: Decreases worker’s earned income and raises the cost of living. Thesis: Union Close Shops are economically depressing to the region that they exist

    Words: 1669 - Pages: 7

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    Industrialization During The Gilded Age

    and standard gauges. Thus, as industrialization boomed a spirit of innovation and invention swept over the nation. Post-Civil War, businesses grew controlling of the economy, influenced politics through corrupt acts, and changed societal views on labor. In the late 19th century, the Scottish-born American industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie

    Words: 843 - Pages: 4

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    Efca

    org/wiki/Employeefreechoiceact The EFCA’S main focus is the amendment to the NLRA (National Labor Relations Act). The amendment will allow employees the choice of forming, joining, assisting labor organizations, and it will provide injunctions for unfair labor practices. The present labor law uses a process called check card. The process starts with employees receiving blank cards from their current union, and getting signatures on the cards from their colleagues. At least 30% of the workers must

    Words: 1094 - Pages: 5

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    International Manag Ment

    planning to open a new manufacturing plants in China and India to save on labor cost. What factors should you consider when making your decision? Is labor outsourcing to developing countries a legitimate business strategy that can be handled without risk of running into a sweatshop scandal? As an executive of a large U.S. multinational corporation planning to open a new manufacturing plants in China and India to save on labor cost. There are a few factors that must consider when making the decision

    Words: 4127 - Pages: 17

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    Business Administration

    | | |MGT/434 | | |Employment Law | Copyright © 2009, 2007, 2006, 2004 by University of Phoenix. All rights reserved. Course Description This course provides an overview of federal statutes and state-regulated areas

    Words: 2454 - Pages: 10

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    Labor Unions

    Labor Unions University of Phoenix MGT434: Employment Law Scott Dunlap February 7, 2008 Labor organizations or unions are formed by employees who want better wages, benefits, and healthy working conditions. Over the years, participation in unions has declined regardless of the benefits it offers. There are less strikes and better wages in the United States which in turn does not warrant the high need for these types of organizations in the work place. Labor unions today compared to in the

    Words: 602 - Pages: 3

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    Claim: Critical Analysis of Worker's Benefit of Protection by Milton Friedman's Free to Choose

    eight of his popular Free to Choose, Milton Friedman takes on labor unions and government intervention in labor markets. He disputes the commonly held notion that labor unions and government spending are the cause of improvements in the living standards and wages of workers over the 19th and 20th centuries. He argues that because only “3 percent of workers” were members of unions as late as 1900, and because government regulation of the labor market was minimal prior to the New Deal, these two factors

    Words: 855 - Pages: 4

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    Sweatshops in America

    are produced. The retailer reaps the benefits of this labor; without, taking responsibility of the cheap production. Sweatshops are back in America because in recent decades, many garment manufacturers have moved overseas and unions have become less powerful. Devastating budget cuts severely limited the U.S. Department of Labor policing of garment factories. There are now only 800 wage, and hour inspectors employed by the Department of Labor. They inspect six million work sites of all kinds in

    Words: 972 - Pages: 4

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    Socio 111

    CBAs as there are employers. So the CBA is just like any contract, let us say CBA: Know all men by this present “this CBA entered into by and between: (now the paragraph describing the employer) XYZ Corp, a duly incorporated entity under Philippines laws with principal

    Words: 2853 - Pages: 12

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