The American Federationist, 63-64. sējumiAmerican Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, 1956 v. 68, no. 7, June 1961- include section: Collective bargaining report. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 73.
8. lappuse
... collective bargaining as a civilized way to avoid strife between employers and em- ployes is the keystone of our national labor policy . This attitude was writ- ten into the 1935 National Labor Re- lations Act , the original Wagner Act ...
... collective bargaining as a civilized way to avoid strife between employers and em- ployes is the keystone of our national labor policy . This attitude was writ- ten into the 1935 National Labor Re- lations Act , the original Wagner Act ...
18. lappuse
... Collective bargaining is a vehicle through which one can make some specific assumptions as to the nature of the economic arrangements that can conceivably follow from automa- tion in general and in specific . Not that the collective ...
... Collective bargaining is a vehicle through which one can make some specific assumptions as to the nature of the economic arrangements that can conceivably follow from automa- tion in general and in specific . Not that the collective ...
1. lappuse
... collective bargaining . American labor relies almost exclusively on collective bargaining for protecting the liveli hood of the workers , for obtaining an ever greater share of the wealth of the nation and for assuring the working ...
... collective bargaining . American labor relies almost exclusively on collective bargaining for protecting the liveli hood of the workers , for obtaining an ever greater share of the wealth of the nation and for assuring the working ...
Saturs
Official Monthly Magazine of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations | 1 |
JANUARY 1956 | 13 |
In This Issue | 1 |
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activities affiliated AFL-CIO agreement American Federation American labor areas benefits bers bill Board building campaign cent citizens collective bargaining Committee Communist Congress of Industrial contract convention COPE David Dubinsky delegates democratic Department economic efforts Eisenhower election employers employes employment Executive Council families Federation of Labor free trade union freedom ganized George Meany Guild housing Industrial Union International Union labor movement labor unions leaders legislation living Matthew Woll meeting membership ment merger millions minimum wage negotiated organized labor Party ployes political President Meany problems production protection rates Schnitzler Secretary Senator social security Soviet standards strike Taft-Hartley Act tion tional tive trade union trade union movement trade unionists union label union members United Vice-President vote wage increases Walter Reuther welfare workers