Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Employment Protection Act, (Swedish: Lagen om anställningsskydd, often abbreviated as LAS) is a labour-market regulation in Sweden. The current law was adopted and entered into the Code of Statutes in 1982, when it replaced a previous Employment Protection Act from 1974. It provides extensive protection for employees from termination and ...
Brazilian labour law (6 P) C. Canadian labour law ... Swedish labour law (4 P) U. United Kingdom labour law (2 C, 172 P) United States labor law (6 C, 86 P)
Employment Injury Benefits Convention: 1964 C121: 24 1. Social security: Employment Policy Convention: 1964 C122: Requirement to develop "co-ordinated economic and social policy"" for the aim of full employment. 107 4. Unemployment: Medical Examination of Young Persons (Underground Work) Convention: 1965 C124: 41 1. Safety
The US is regulated by the Fair Labor Standards Act [27] and has explicit laws, whereas other countries such as Sweden might lack explicit laws. In Sweden minimum wages are negotiated between the labour market parties (unions and employer organizations) through collective agreements that also cover non-union workers at workplaces with ...
If a worker from America performs part of her job in Brazil, China and Denmark (a "peripatetic" worker) or if a worker is engaged in Ecuador to work as an expatriate abroad in France, an employer may seek to characterise the contract of employment as being governed by the law of the country where labour rights are least favourable to the worker ...
European labour law regulates basic transnational standards of employment and partnership at work in the European Union and countries adhering to the European Convention on Human Rights. In setting regulatory floors to competition for job-creating investment within the Union, and in promoting a degree of employee consultation in the workplace ...
Companies and the law may also differ as to whether public holidays are counted as part of the minimum leave. Disparities in national minimums are still subject of debate regarding work-life balance and perceived differences between nations. These numbers usually refer to full-time employment – part-time workers may get a reduced number of days.
Grand Hotel Saltsjöbaden in Saltsjöbaden, where the treaty was signed.. The Saltsjöbaden Agreement (Swedish: Saltsjöbadsavtalet) is a Swedish collective agreement signed between the Swedish Trade Union Confederation (Swedish: Landsorganisationen, LO) and the Swedish Employers Association (Swedish: Svenska arbetsgivareföreningen, SAF) on 20 December 1938, that became a model for other ...