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What Do We Know about Contracting Out in the United States? Evidence from Household and Establishment Surveys
the United States Evidence Household Establishment Surveys
2009/11/5
A variety of evidence points to significant growth in domestic contracting out over the last two decades, yet the phenomenon is not well documented. In this paper, we pull together data from various s...
The Role of Partnerships in Economic Development and Labor Markets in the United States
Partnerships Economic Development Labor Markets the United States
2009/11/5
This paper describes the role of local partnerships in the delivery of workforce and economic development services in the United States. Partnerships include both public and private organizations and ...
The United Kindom Recalibrates the U.S. National Labor Relations Act:Possible Lessons for the United States?
National Labor Relations Act Possible Lessons the United States
2009/11/5
Since June 2000, the United Kingdom has administered a
statutory scheme for trade union recognition similar to that available
under the U.S. National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), by which a
majority...
Social Citizenship and Workfare in the United States and Western Europe:The Paradox of Inclusion
Social Citizenship the United States Western Europe Paradox of Inclusion
2009/11/5
In the third quarter of the twentieth century, labor movements in
much of the industrialized world won substantial improvements in
employment rights and social protections. In the following quarter,...
Intergovernmental Relations in Employment Policy:The United States Experience
Intergovernmental Relations Employment Policy The United States Experience
2009/11/5
This paper examines the development of employment policy in the twentieth century by viewing the interplay of federal, state, and local partners. The programs considered include unemployment insurance...
A Comparative Analysis of the Law Regulating Employment Arbitration Agreements in the United States and Canada
Comparative Analysis Law Regulating Employment Arbitration Agreements
2009/11/5
Following decisions of the United States Supreme Court in
Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.1 and more recently in Circuit
City Stores, Inc. v. Adams,2 it has become increasingly common for
Am...
Scientific Knowledge Production in the United States and Germany:The Case of Industrial Relations Research
Scientific Knowledge Production the United States Germany Industrial Relations Research
2009/11/5
The fundamental questions of what scientific knowledge is, how
knowledge is created in the social sciences, and how social science
disciplines develop, are rarely being discussed in the academic
di...
Do the Social Sciences Shape Corporate Anti-Discrimination Practice?:The United States and France
Social Sciences Anti-Discrimination Practice The United States France
2009/11/5
Since the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, U.S. antidiscrimination
law and workplace practice have undergone major
revolutions. At first both law and practice were oriented to
preventing pr...
Time Use of Mothers in the United States: Recent Evidence from the American Time Use Survey
Time Use of Mothers the United States the American Time
2009/11/5
Perhaps the most noteworthy finding of our research to date is the estimated
positive relationship between the mother's wage and her primary child caregiving time. As was hypothesized more than 35 y...
Social Science in Europe,Japan,and the United States
Social Science Europe Japan the United States
2009/11/5
Frank Dobbin, Carola Frege, and Michio Nitta have given us a
set of intriguing and learned essays, each focusing on how the social
sciences are embedded in disparate cultural and legal matrixes in
...
The Marginalization of Academic Labor Law in the United States:A Footnote to Estlund and Summers
Marginalization Academic Labor Law United States Footnote Estlund Summers
2009/11/5
Estlund’s paper1 and Summer’s comment2 complement one
another rather nicely: Estlund argues that labor law, the law of
unionization and collective bargaining, has become marginal, has lost
its impo...
Information Technology and Workers' Privacy:The United States Law
Information Technology Workers' Privacy United States Law
2009/11/5
Cyberspace and Privacy, the topic of a Symposium in the
Stanford Law Review, produced six hundred pages of analyses and
commentary by sixteen prominent commentators.1 Despite the wealth
of legal th...
Employment outlook is more favorable for the U.S. than for Europe; demographic pressures are easing in the U.S. but intensifying abroad; Europe has a much larger group of long-term unemployed.
The incidence and severity of work injuries and illnesses are considerably lower in Japan then in the United States, although fatality rates are comparable. A decline in Japanese injury and illness ra...
Characteristics of self-employed women in the United States
self-employed women the United States
2009/5/4
One in 15 employed women was self-employed in her main job in 1990. The decision to become self-employed appears intricately linked with several other decisions for a woman-as individual, as a househo...