词汇 | organized-labour |
释义 | organized labour noun[ U ] UK(UK alsoorganised labour); (USorganized labor)uk /ˌɔː.ɡən.aɪzd ˈleɪ.bər/ us /ˌɔː.ɡən.aɪzd ˈleɪ.bɚ/ workers considered as a group that can act together to improve their situation参加工会的工人 Industrial relations anti-union arbitrate arbitration arbitrator bargaining power closed shop collective bargaining free collective bargaining industrial relations inter-union labor union labour relations mastersinger shop steward student union trade union trade unionism trade unionist unionization unionize organized labour | Business Englishorganized labour noun[ U ] UK(USorganized labor)ukus HR, WORKPLACE workers who belong to a trade union, considered as a group: As the century wore on, organized labour won Saturday afternoon holidays for factory workers and miners. the organized labor movement Examples of organized labourorganized labour Where it was once seen as an economic partner to business under social-democratic regimes, organizedlabour is cast as a market 'rigidity' under neo-liberalism. The interests of management, faced with spiraling cost of labour, and unions, operating in a labour surplus economy, converged towards a masculinisation of organizedlabour. We may distinguish between regimes that respect the autonomy of organizedlabour (democratic) and those that do not (authoritarian). Rather than favouring organizedlabour, government policy had periodically to discipline workers over pay claims when other methods of managing expectations had failed. In 1968 organizedlabour renewed agitation for a plan, in conditions that were conducive to reform. In spite of defeats and membership declines from the late 1980s, organizedlabour made some permanent gains in its political position. The organizedlabour movement was slow to adopt a strategy to cope with the social crisis. Yamamoto embarks on this attempt through a study of two peace movements: that which developed around organizedlabour, and that comprised of women. As already noted, the case for organizedlabour is always discussed in detail and often with insight. Having never experienced populist rule, organizedlabour was not perceived by the middle classes as an economic threat. The state-labour relationship can be divided into those where governments seek to integrate organizedlabour into some form co-operative relationship (corporatist) and those that do not (non-collusive). The proliferation of pro-redistributional civic groups consisting largely of middle class activists is another indicator of the potential for correspondence between middle class and organizedlabour interests. Radical pro-market reforms are typically introduced in response to economic crises when organizedlabour resistance is demoralized by high unemployment and the absence of viable alternatives. The coal owners, like government, had an interest in preventing explosions, and it was organized labour that was forced to compromise over their desire for more punitive measures. I, in common with anybody else who has had anything to do with organizedlabour, deprecate strikes. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 See all examples of organized labour These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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