Anthropology and Labour Law
In: This Chapter is forthcoming in Research Methods in Labour Law: A Handbook, edited by Alysia Blackham and Sean Cooney, Edward Elgar, Forthcoming
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In: This Chapter is forthcoming in Research Methods in Labour Law: A Handbook, edited by Alysia Blackham and Sean Cooney, Edward Elgar, Forthcoming
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In: Labour, Equality and Human Rights (LEAH) Research Group, Working Paper no. 23, Monash University (2021)
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Working paper
In: Mahy , P 2020 , ' COVID-19 and labour law : Indonesia ' , Italian Labour Law e-Journal , vol. 13 , no. 1S . https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1561-8048/10937
The COVID-19 pandemic is having a devastating impact on employment and livelihoods in Indonesia. Understanding the implications for workers requires mapping the combined interactions of existing labour law protections, new regulations and social security measures. This all also needs to be understood in the context of national and regional government power-sharing, Indonesia's large informal economy and the likely worsening of compliance with formal labour protections during the pandemic.
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In: International Journal of Law in Context, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 2016
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Working paper
In: Philippine Journal of Labor and Industrial Relations, v. XXXII (1 & 2), [2012], pp. 1-28 (published January 2015)
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Working paper
In: Policy & internet, Band 14, Heft 3, S. 574-596
ISSN: 1944-2866
AbstractIndonesia boasts a lively influencer scene. These influencers promote various products and messages, including political messages, to their followers for commercial gain, and have been particularly active during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic. Influencers in Indonesia are potentially subject to state regulation, particularly via the controversial Electronic Transactions and Information Law (ITE Law) which criminalizes digital communications that "breach morality," defame the good name of another, or spread misleading information resulting in consumer losses. In addition, influencers face a risk of community‐led regulation, via an online backlash, should they transgress perceived moral boundaries. In this article, we present and analyze a series of case studies where influencer behavior has attracted regulatory responses. These cases illustrate the interactions among regulatory actors and also where and how the lines for acceptable influencer moral standards of behavior are being drawn.
In: Asian journal of law and society, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 413-453
ISSN: 2052-9023
AbstractGenerally speaking there has been a relative dearth of serious scholarship focusing on the evolution of Indian labour law in its economic, social, and political contexts. Such work as there is tends to be constituted of fragmented and short journal articles and notes, including those by labour economists and industrial relations scholars. The present work undertakes a survey of the literature in the field, examining first the various periods through which Indian labour law has evolved up to the present time, and second the extent to which the labour law system can be seen to have fulfilled its two core objectives: the protection of labour and the maintenance of industrial peace. The survey reveals that Indian "labour law" in the formal sense has very little purchase in terms of its application in pursuit of its objects. This, in turn, suggests that some other approach is required to reach a more grounded and accurate understanding of how, and to what effect, labour is regulated in India.
In: A revised version of this paper has been published in the Asian Journal of Law and Society, Band (2), S. 413-453
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In: Final version of this Chapter has been published in Cambridge Handbook of Comparative Law, edited by Mathias Siems and Po Jen Yap, Cambridge University Press, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108914741.009
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In: The American Journal of Comparative Law, Volume 67, Issue 3, September 2019, Pages 515–549
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In: U. of Adelaide Law Research Paper No. 2020-52
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