Everyday transgressions: domestic workers' transnational challenge to international labor law
"This book theorizes the law of the household workplace, and how ongoing multilevel regulatory innovation regarding domestic work can be fostered"--
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"This book theorizes the law of the household workplace, and how ongoing multilevel regulatory innovation regarding domestic work can be fostered"--
In: Research handbooks in international law
In: Routledge studies in employment and work relations in context, 6
'Social Regionalism in the Global Economy' collects essays by international specialists attempting to move beyond textual analyses of regional agreements to offer new accounts of regional integration by combing insights from developing countries with original analyses from the EU.
In: Ius comparatum - global studies in comparative law volume 34
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword: The Long Game -- Introduction: Exploring the Social and Educational Experiences of Black Canadian Youth over Time -- 1 Historical and Social Context of the Schooling and Education of African Canadians -- Response to Chapter 1 Complicating Gender and Racial Identities within the Study of Educational History -- 2 Generational Differences in Black Students' Education Pursuits and Performance -- Response to Chapter 2 It's the Same with Black British Caribbean Pupils -- 3 "To Make a Better Future": Narrative of a 1.5-Generation Caribbean Canadian -- Response to Chapter 3 Using Gender to Think Through Migration, Love, and Student Success -- 4 Students "at Risk": Stereotypes and the Schooling of Black Boys -- Response to Chapter 4 Black Lives Matter in the USA and Canada -- 5 More than Brains, Education, and Hard Work: The Aspirations and Career Trajectories of Two Young Black Men -- Response to Chapter 5 What Folks Don't Get: Race and Class Matter -- 6 Class, Race, and Schooling in the Performance of Black Male Athleticism -- Response to Chapter 6 Basketball's Black Creative Labour and the Mitigation of Anti-Black Schooling -- 7 Troubling Role Models: Seeing Racialization in the Discourse Relating to "Corrective Agents" for Black Males -- Response to Chapter 7 Black Role Models and Mentorship under Racial Capitalism -- 8 "Up to No Good": Black on the Streets and Encountering Police -- Response to Chapter 8 It Could Have Been Written Today: A Montrealer's Reflection -- 9 "Colour Matters": Suburban Life as Social Mobility and Its High Cost for Black Youth -- Response to Chapter 9 "What Floats in the Air Is Chance": Respectability Politics and the Search for Upward Mobility in Canada -- 10 Towards Equity in Education for Black Students in the Greater Toronto Area -- Response to Chapter 10 "I Will Treat All My Students with Respect": The Limits of Good Intentions -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgments -- Contributors -- Index
In: Bulletin for comparative labour relations volume 92