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Why Is Collective Bargaining Failing In South Africa? offers an extensive analysis of the current nature of collective bargaining in South Africa. Collective bargaining is failing in South Africa because the parties to the process have failed to seek ways of achieving inclusive social development and of balancing the requirements of a competitive economy, the imperative for employment creation and the achievement of an ecologically sustainable environment. This means that many of the inequalities in the labour market that were created by apartheid remain unaddressed.
Contents include:
- Business as an Agency for Change in South Africa – the Contested Meaning and Purpose of Collective Bargaining
- The Relevance of an Understanding of Normal and Deep-rooted Conflict to Collective Bargaining
- The Disjuncture between Employment Creation and Collective Bargaining in the Fourth Industrial Revolution
- Strikes, Rolling Mass Action and Civil Conflicts as Indicators of South Africa’s Unrest Proneness
- Stakeholder Fragmentation and Collective Bargaining in South Africa – the Interaction of Pathologies of Conflict and Poverty
- Implications, opportunities and recommendations.
This book will be of interest to businessmen and -women, trade unionists, human resources and industrial relations practitioners, policy makers, strategic planners, decision-makers, , employees, investors, religious leaders, politicians, academics, as well as concerned South Africans from all walks of life who are seeking to make South Africa a better place in which to live.
Dr Geoff Heald is a senior lecturer in negotiation at the University of the Witwatersrand Graduate School of Business Administration (Wits Business School) in Johannesburg, South Africa. Most recently, Geoff has been working on the African Negotiation Project (ANP) which entails negotiation research, education, training, conferencing and consulting for commercial, industrial relations and political negotiations across the continent of Africa.
Published in two volumes for the Rolls Series between 1888 and
1889, this is the oldest surviving metrical chronicle in vernacular
French. It was written by the Anglo-Norman poet and historian
Geoffrei Gaimar (fl. 1136 7), who lived in England at a time when
French was still used among the aristocracy. The text is largely
based on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and also draws on various
French, English and Latin sources. Gaimar's unique perspective
breaks with the tradition of religious chronicles by offering the
first secular account of the history of England. Edited by
archivist and antiquary Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy (1804 78) and
Charles Trice Martin (1842 1914), Volume 1 presents the original
text. It covers the period from the arrival of Cerdic in 495 to the
death of Henry I and includes the story of Havelok the Dane.
Published in two volumes for the Rolls Series between 1888 and
1889, this is the oldest surviving metrical chronicle in vernacular
French. It was written by the Anglo-Norman poet and historian
Geoffrei Gaimar (fl. 1136 7), who lived in England at a time when
French was still used among the aristocracy. The text is largely
based on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and also draws on various
French, English and Latin sources. Gaimar's unique perspective
breaks with the tradition of religious chronicles by offering the
first secular account of the history of England. Edited by
archivist and antiquary Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy (1804 78) and
Charles Trice Martin (1842 1914), Volume 2 is a translation of the
original text into modern English. It covers the period from the
arrival of Cerdic in 495 to the death of Henry I and includes the
story of Havelok the Dane.
The university, as a core institution of democratic society, is
increasingly threatened by the intrusion of big business.
Corporations are working their way into academe in subtle and
obvious ways: granting of exclusive concessions rights on campus to
a softdrink manufacturer; use of a major portion of the resources,
faculty, and research efforts of university departments by a
particular company in exchange for modest funding; university
administrators whose salaries are often doubled for service on the
boards of important corporate contributors. Compounding the problem
is the growing scarcity of public funding, which makes universities
vulnerable to the lure of big money from pharmaceutical and
biotechnology firms, computer giants, and wealthy private donors.
Can faculty members remain independent under such heavy corporate
influence? How does big money influence the direction of research?
These are among the serious questions raised by the revealing
articles in this thought-provoking and disturbing collection.
Campus, Inc. exposes this new form of corporate welfare through
hard research. More importantly, it emphasizes the necessity of
preserving the democratic character of the university with its
independent inquiry, diversity of viewpoints, and disinterested
expertise. The authors also provide real and replicable examples,
from the front-line of the movement, of actions that have been
taken against campus corporatization: Successful efforts to take
universities off the corporate auction block are becoming more
common. A new era of student activism has helped roll back the sale
of sweatshop-produced items in campus stores; the re-emergence of
unions has helped faculty organize to prevent "hostile takeovers"
of our publicly funded institutions; and effective strategies to
redemocratize the university are increasingly available.
This is a powerful account of the Fourth Crusade, which defined a
pivotal time in the history of the world. A time when Christian
soldiers - Crusaders - set forth from the comfort and safety of
their homelands to defend the rights of Christian pilgrims and free
the ancient Holy Lands from the tyranny of their muslim oppressors.
This book is to be read as one would read a personal journal or
diary, entry by entry. There are no chapters here, just a step by
step trek to recapture hallowed ground. It is a powerful and
captivating chronicle, written by Geoffry de Villehardouin
(1160-1212 AD), an actual participant in the Fourth Crusade.
Geoffry was a soldier, a Christian Knight, and one of the special
envoys sent to facilitate transport of the expedition. This is his
story of the Fourth Crusade, a story of Christendom at the end of
the Dark Ages. A true classic of great historic significance,
providing rare insight to the courage and faith of these mighty
Christian knights. Many have debated the successes and failures of
the Fourth Crusade, and the ramifications of the conquering of
Constantinople in 1204, but none can deny the miraculous
achievements of these Christian Knights. The First Crusade gave
birth to a new morning in the Holy Land and the Kingdom of
Jerusalem on July 15, 1099, when a victorious Christian army raised
the Cross of Christ once again in the City of David. And the
Crusades that followed served notice on tyrants everywhere that
their campaigns of mayhem and oppression would not go unchallenged.
These Crusades achieved that goal, and ushered in the end to the
Dark Ages, and made possible the founding of a bright shining city
on a hill. Judge Hal Moroz, from the Introduction
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The Law And Practice Of Divorce Geoffry Lancelot Hardy E.
Wilson, 1907
THIS 36 PAGE ARTICLE WAS EXTRACTED FROM THE BOOK: Theatrum Chemicum
Brittannicum, by Geoffry Chaucer. To purchase the entire book,
please order ISBN 0922802890.
THIS 36 PAGE ARTICLE WAS EXTRACTED FROM THE BOOK: Theatrum Chemicum
Brittannicum, by Geoffry Chaucer. To purchase the entire book,
please order ISBN 0922802890.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
1908 -- INTRODUCTION -- Was never eye did see that face, Was never
ear did hear that tongue, Was never mind did mind his grace, That
ever thought the travail long But eyes and ears and every thought
Were with his sweet perfections caught. From LOWELL ESSSAY. THIS
preface and this book are not meant for the scholar who reads his
Middle English with ease, nor again for the student who wishes to
delve into the grammar and the syntax of fourteenth - century
English. Rather are they meant for those many people who have not
read, who say they cannot read, Chaucer. For, let writers deny it
as they will, to the modern Englishman, and still more to the
modern Englishwoman, Chaucer is a sealed book. A few lines here and
there are clear enough-but then the reader is pulled up sharp and
has to refer to notes and glossary and the man who sets out for
enjoyment, will not for long turn aside to notes and glossary,
however well they may be supplied. If it were not so, if this
contention were not true, Professor Skeat would not have thought it
necessary to publish a modern version of the beautiful Knightes
Tale. The understanding of Chaucer and the love of him the two go
together are not very old. Neither Addison nor Pope could
appreciate him, and it is well known into what Dryden turned the
tales. But attempts have been made to bring Chaucer nearer to the
people. Charles Cowden Clarke purified him others modernised his
spelling others again so altered him in modernising him that the
poet was unrecognisable. Not one of these versions has succeeded.
It is a bold thing to hope to prosper where so many have failed but
the present editor is bound to explain-and to defend-his method. To
begin with, certaintales, seven out of the twenty-four, have been
left untouched. They are so broad, so plainspoken, that no amount
of editing or alteration will make them suitable for the twentieth
century. To these my preface makes no further reference. But in
regard to the other seventeen, I may say that, first, the spelling
has been slightly modernised, modernised just enough to leave its
quaintness and take away some of its difficulty. To take a
well-known passage and compare the ordinary version with the
present version-Ther saugh I first the derke imagining Of felonye
and a1 the compassyng The cruel ire reed as any glede The pykepurs
and eek the pale drede The smyler with the knyf under the cloke The
shepne brenning with the blake smoke The treson of the mordring in
the bedde The open werre with woundes a1 bibledde Contek with blody
knyf and sharp manace A1 ful of chirking was that sory place. Ther
saw I first the dark irnaginyng Of felony, and a1 the wmpassyng The
cruel wrath, as eny furnace red The pickepurs, and eke the pale
Dread The smyler with the knyf under his cloke The stables burnyng
with the blake smoke The treson of the murtheryng in the bed The
open warres, with woundes a1 y-bled Conflict with bloody knyf, and
sharp menace. A1 ful of shriekyng was that sory place. Again,
difficulties of vocabulary have been treated in the same way. There
is no pretence that this version is the Chaucer of the scholar, or
the Chaucer of any recognised text and I give an instance as
before, comparing the ordinary version with that printed in this
volume-The sleere of him-self yet saugh I ther His herte-blood hath
bathed a1 his heer The nay1 y-driven in the shode a-night The colde
deeth with mouth gapingupright. Amiddes of the temple sat
meschaunce With discomfort and sory contenaunce Yet saugh I
woodnesse laughing in his rage Armed complaint, out-hees, and fiers
outrage The careyne in the bush with throte y-come A thousand slayn
and nat of qualm y-siorve The tiraunt with the prey by force y-raft
The toune destroyed ther was nothing laft...
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
Since its enactment in 1935, Social Security has been amended
hundreds of times. Consequently, this paper is not fully
comprehensive. Instead, it briefly summarises discussions on
individual major amendments. These summations do not capture the
range of motivations behind Social Security votes; rather they
record the arguments expressed at the time and, by so doing,
attempt to give the reader the tone and context of the debate on
major Social Security issues brought before the House and Senate
chambers.
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