Results 71 to 80 of about 23,219 (240)
Profit Sharing, Teams, and Earnings
ABSTRACT This paper examines the impact of two team arrangements on the association between profit sharing and workers' earnings. In non‐interconnected teams individuals work on a single team, whereas in interconnected teams some employees work on several teams.
Marco A. Barrenechea‐Méndez +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Is a retrospective review of the U.S. regulatory policy and sanctions imposed on Cuba, citizens and legal entities of this country, as well as against third countries and persons related to this state.
Tatsiana N. Mikhaliova +1 more
doaj +1 more source
The Spatial Anatomy of Working at Home: Concepts, Measures and Types of Spaces Used
ABSTRACT This article provides a spatial analysis of working at home. It makes distinctions according to the extent to which the boundaries of work and home spatially overlap. Using this conceptual lens, it deploys data from Britain′s Skills and Employment Survey to track the trends and patterns of homeworking and hybrid working over the last two ...
Alan Felstead +5 more
wiley +1 more source
The Narrative Continent: Discursive Recognition and the EU's Technological Actorness
Abstract Recognition in global politics is not only earned through institutions or capabilities; it is narrated into being. This article investigates how the European Union (EU) is framed as a technological actor in global discourse, focusing on the symbolic dynamics of discursive recognition.
Mahmoud Javadi
wiley +1 more source
This paper examines the extraterritorial obligations of States under the ICESCR concerning the effects of their unilateral sectoral sanctions and the implications for human rights.
Paula Mosquera Marquez
doaj +1 more source
Security measures abroad and extraterritorial human rights obligations
International human rights law (IHRL) was initiated after the Second World War as part of public international law, which in turn had been based on the Westphalian concept of exclusive territorial sovereignty. As a result, IHRL has been informed by this territorial paradigm: A state is, first and foremost, obligated to respect, protect and fulfil human
openaire +1 more source
Extraterritorial State Obligations Beyond the Concept of Jurisdiction [PDF]
This Article discusses the extraterritorial human rights obligations of states and proposes a new approach for conceptualizing them. While extraterritorial state obligations within the concept of state jurisdiction are indisputably recognized, a more comprehensive perspective beyond jurisdiction is generally lacking. This Article aims to fill that gap.
openaire +1 more source
Field Theory and Colonialism: Indirect Colonial Situation as a Social Field in Egypt (1882–1922)
ABSTRACT This paper argues that Egypt under British rule (1882–1922) constituted a field of power in which the local state of Egypt and the British administration competed to dominate three key subfields to ensure control over a contested territory: the modern courts system, policing, and agricultural production.
Mehdi Hoseini
wiley +1 more source
Becoming legal: feminism and abortion law in 1970s Italy
Abstract Conventional top‐down approaches to legal reform tend to overlook the contributions of social movements in legal change, often resulting in a gender‐blind analysis. In response, I advance ‘becoming legal’ as an analytical framework to rethink legal change in terms of a bottom‐up process encompassing informal proceedings as well as formal ...
ELENA CARUSO
wiley +1 more source
The right to environment at sea: a human rights-based approach to marine environmental protection
The marine environment is becoming increasingly fragile and complex, posing serious threats to fundamental human rights. Despite the growing interconnection between marine protection and human rights, a significant gap persists between the international ...
Guanding Wang, Liang Yu, Xi Chen
doaj +1 more source

