1,721,032 research outputs found

    Lavoro e sviluppo sostenibile nel mondo post-globale. Riflessioni a partire da un recente volume di Tonia Novitz

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    L'articolo riflette sul legame tra lavoro e sviluppo sostenibile nel nuovo contesto di de-globalizzazione, prendendo spunto da un recente libro di Tonia Novitz

    The normative promise of sustainability for labour standards – and the limitations of the SDGs

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    How can SDGs contribute to the promotion of labour rights? Tonia Novitz argues that the rights of workers may, in principle, benefit from being embedded in a wider sustainability discourse. However, the text of the SDGs makes it nearly impossible to achieve transformational justice within and between generations. (Also translated into Dutch and published in MO*Magazine (https://www.mo.be/wereldblog/de-duurzaamheid-van-arbeidsrechten-en-beperkingen-van-sdg-s)

    Workshop Arguments for and against Socioeconomic Rights, Past and Present

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    Socioeconomic Rights in History Workshop Leverhulme Trust International Network at Harvard Law School March 20-21, 2017 Programme: March 20, Monday 9:00 – 9:30am Introduction 9:30 - 11:15am Small group meetings Six groups will meet separately to discuss papers Group 1: The Early Modern and Enlightenment Eras Claudia Stein, Darrin McMahon and Dan Edelstein Group 2: The Age of Revolutions Charles Walton, Mark Philp, Hannah Callaway, Philip Kaisary Group 3: Labour Rights and Gender Tonia Novitz..

    Permissible Objectives of a Strike

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    Information and Communication Technology and Voice

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    Divergent Remedial Mechanisms in the Council of Europe

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    Social Sustainability, Labour and Trade:

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    New Zealand Industrial Relations and the International Labour Organisation: Resolving Contradictions Implicit in Freedom of Association

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    The International Labour Organisation (IW) has long been committed to the promotion of "freedom of association" as "one of the primary safeguards of peace and social justice". Since 1952, the ILO Committee on Freedom of Association (CFA) has considered complaints relating to freedom of association and reviewed domestic legislation. In doing so, the CFA has attempted to establish a set of guidelines for state conduct, but this article suggests that the Committee's efforts have been hindered by contradictions inherent in the principle of "freedom of association".</jats:p
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