Name: Li Jiayu Is it acceptable for companies to employ child labour/very low wage labour? Answer Shell International Limited(SI) (2000) mentions that child labour refers to the employment of children at regular and sustained labour‚ it is considered exploitative by many international organizations and is illegal in a lot of countries. Due to the detrimental consequence for the children who are engaged in the excessive and dangerous levels of work‚ one of the most disastrous effects reflects
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CAUSES OF CHILD LABOUR • Poverty • Parental illiteracy • Tradition of making children learn the family skills • Absence of universal compulsory Primary education • Social apathy and tolerance of child labour • Ignorance of the parents about the adverse consequences of Child labour • Ineffective enforcement of the legal provisions pertaining to child labour • Non-availability of and non-accessibility to schools • Irrelevant and non-attractive school curriculum • Employers prefer children as they constitute
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CHILD LABOUR‚ a menace in India. The phrase – ’Today’s children are the citizens of tomorrow’ – has fallen between the cracks‚ given the prevailing child labour across the country. Children are made to work as slaves in factories‚ fields‚ and are also self-employed as‚ milkman‚ rag-pickers‚ shoe-polisher and rickshaw pullers. The Global Child Labor Index 2012‚ prepared by Maplecroft‚ ranks India 27th on the list of countries where children are at risk of being victim to child labour. “I
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TERM PAPER BWB 4013 LABOUR LAWS AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS SEMESTER JUNE 2012 The following are the areas on which you may chose to write the term paper. They are however general in nature so that you may choose and define the scope in which you want to write your paper. You are free to approach the subject from whatever angle you deem suitable as long as it does not digress from the original topic. Alternatively‚ you may also suggest a new topic on which you would like to write about as
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information: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/fsij20 Aesthetic Labour in Interactive Service Work: Some Case Study Evidence from the ‘New’ Glasgow a a Chris Warhurst ‚ DENNIS NICKSON ‚ ANNE a WITZ & ANNE MARIE CULLEN a a Department of Human Resource Management ‚ University of Strathclyde ‚ Glasgow‚ G1 1XT Published online: 20 Aug 2006. To cite this article: Chris Warhurst ‚ DENNIS NICKSON ‚ ANNE WITZ & ANNE MARIE CULLEN (2000) Aesthetic Labour in Interactive Service Work: Some Case Study Evidence from
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the best way to get their own publicity. They got the help of trade unions and started some kind of movement in which they said that they will feed the aspirations of normal people.� However‚ Professor Sharad Bhowmik‚ Dean‚ School of Management & Labour Studies‚ Tata Institute of Social Studies‚ cites brutality of the state governments while quelling riots and the apathy of managements against trade unions. �The state government has been excessively oppressive on any section of the workers who have
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To what extent was party policy the most important factor in the fluctuating fortunes of the Labour party 1900-45? The main aim for Labour at the start of the 20th century was to establish itself as a party that recognised and appealed to the working classes‚ as well as breaking down the two-party system in Britain with the addition of a new political force. The founding of the Labour Representation Committee can be attributed somewhat to Keir Hardie in the late 1800s‚ a movement that grew noticeably
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Give Labour Day back to the workers Robert Fulford‚ Financial Post Published: Friday‚ August 29‚ 2008 Most job-holding Canadians do not belong to unions and express absolutely no wish to join. That ’s the most striking and (in numerical terms) the most convincing conclusion that emerges from the Nanos Research national survey of 1‚000 employees. Behind that single fact we can glimpse a major change in Canadian society‚ the slow but apparently inevitable death of a once-vibrant force in national
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REPORT OF THE WORKING GROUP ON “LABOUR LAWS & OTHER REGULATIONS” FOR THE TWELFTH FIVE YEAR PLAN (2012-17) MINISTRY OF LABOUR & EMPLOYMENT Z-20025/9/2011-Coord CONTENTS Sl. No. 01. 02. 03. 04. 05. Preface Introduction SUBJECT Page No. 1 2 2–3 3–7 7 – 11 Historical background Constitutional frame work Legislative Initiatives Recently Taken/ Proposed to be Taken Views of the Stake Holders on Labour Laws Recommendations of the Working Group Annexures – I‚ II‚ III and IV 06. 12
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11.18% Total workforce (all ages) 274783249 127083239 401866488 the children upto 14yrs in the workforce is 12626505 = 12.62 millions = child labour in 2001 (graph) 11% of the workforce of india is child labour. One in every 10 workers in India is a child! If you allocate a tenth of India’s GDP to this share you can see India’s Child Labour has a stake in India’s GDP POINTS TO PONDER: 1) In practice‚ however‚ the poverty argument does not hold water. Precisely the opposite is true:
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