Results 201 to 210 of about 3,414 (247)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

The Labour Force

1969
The growth of the port of London, as we saw in the previous chapter, was entirely without plan. In fact until the creation of the P.L.A. in 1908 the port did not even exist as a formal institution. It was merely an unregulated meeting-place for a vast number of diverse interests—shipowners, wharfingers, lighterage concerns, merchants, dock companies ...
E. H. Carr, R. W. Davies
  +4 more sources

The Labour Force

1984
Against this background, what about the Asians as producers? What do economic trends imply for Uzbekistan’s labour force? If the rate of economic expansion is lagging behind the growth of the population as a whole; and if the growth rate of the younger population is exceeding that of the older age-groups, what does this mean in terms of jobs, and in ...
openaire   +1 more source

Forced Labour

2014
This article examines the conditions, forms and consequences of forced labor and recruitment during the First World War, especially in German-occupied Northern France, Belgium, Russian-Poland and Lithuania. It will offer an explanation of the extent to which German labor policy from 1914-1918 served as a blueprint for the Nazi forced labor system ...
Thiel, Jens, Westerhoff, Christian
openaire   +1 more source

The Labour Force

1972
Manpower statistics cover a wide field.1 This chapter concentrates on those aspects which are of particular importance to sociologists: the structure of the occupied population, unemployment, hours of work, wage rates and earnings, the cost-of-living and retail prices, trade union membership, and industrial disputes.
George Sayer Bain   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy