1. Corporate governance, employment systems and workplace partnerships in Australia -- 2. Law and regulatory style in Australian corporate governance and employment systems -- 3. Corporate governance and the management of labour : contemporary business practices in ten Australian companies -- 4. Attitudes and outlooks of Australian company directors to stakeholders : the survey data -- 5. The interaction of corporate governance and labour management in Australian companies : an analysis -- 6. Postscript.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
In: Mitchell , R 2019 , ' Forty years of labour law scholarship in New Zealand : a reflection on the contribution of Gordon Anderson ' , Victoria University of Wellington Law Review , vol. 50 , no. 2 , pp. 159-171 . https://doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v50i2.5740
This special issue of the Victoria University of Wellington Law Review is published in recognition of Gordon Anderson's outstanding contribution to the study of the academic and socio-economic policy field of labour law in New Zealand since the mid-1970s. During this period of time Gordon's work has informed both teaching and learning in labour law scholarship and legal practice, charted the shifts in labour law policy, and examined the implications of these shifts for industrial and employment relations and human resource practices in business. This impressive output has included the publication of several full-length accounts of New Zealand labour law, incorporating background history, economic and political contexts and institutional arrangements, accompanied by analytical accounts of the general principles of individual and collective regulation. At the same time his research work, and his extensive engagement with labour lawyers internationally, has considerably expanded the international understanding and interest in New Zealand's labour law system, drawing it more immediately and closely into comparison with other national systems and sets of laws.
<p>The 2011 Canadian election campaign demonstrates once again that while the health care debate is always a highly contested political issue, little of the discussion originates from, or is concerned with, citizens under 18 years of age. This paper responds to this gap in knowledge with findings from a qualitative, exploratory human rights study investigating the youth-led health promotion group REACT (Resist, Expose and Challenge [big] Tobacco). Under the auspices of the Chief Medical Officer, successive cohorts of high-school students have been working within the Niagara Public Health Region in Ontario, Canada since 2005. The main findings suggest that young people are fully competent to manage important aspects of their own health, and have led authorities to support health-enhancing behaviours for themselves and their peers. Moreover, it is clear that rights-based health promotion has been underutilized in Canada since dominant theoretical approaches to healthy development and traditional top-down institutional processes frequently overlook – and thus violate – the participatory human rights of young people. This violation represents a social justice issue with far-reaching consequences for equity in the overall health of the Canadian population.</p>
In: The Tokyo major war crimes trial: the records of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East; with an authoritative commentary and comprehensive guide; a collection in 124 volumes [1]