25 research outputs found

    Regulating for Australia's youngest workers

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    Child labour is a phrase associated with exploitation, poverty, insufficient education and various forms of physical abuse. These connotations do not match Australian perceptions about the employment of children and are not correlated with mainstream dialogue on teenagers in part time and casual employment. Child employment is an accepted part of Australian society, with older children making up a significant portion of the workforce. Minimum standards are increasingly regarded a critical safeguard for young Australians at work, evidenced by recent state level statutory amendment and enactment of dedicated legislation. This article makes two submissions; first, it suggests the regulation of young people's working conditions is inappropriately neglected at national level in Australia, and secondly, it proposes national standards should be set and equated with those in other developed economies, meeting international standards. The 1994 European Community Directive on the Protection of Young Workers is referred to as a suitable benchmark

    Employment Law: An Outline

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    Employment Law: Concepts and Cases

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    Now in its fourth edition, Employment Law: Concepts and Cases is an introductory text for students undertaking employment law subjects as part of an arts, business, human resource management or legal studies degree. Written in clear, everyday language and easily accessible for students who may not have studied any law, this book explores core legal features of the employment relationship, focusing on the concepts and cases that explain employer and employee rights and responsibilities in Australia. It also covers key aspects of the Fair Work and uniform Work Health and Safety legislation. Important case law relevant to a study of employment law is presented simply and succinctly

    Employment Law: An Outline

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    Employment dispute resolution in Western Australia, a new jurisdiction

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    The Employment Dispute Resolution Act 2008 (WA) creates a new dispute resolution jurisdiction for the Western Australian Industrial Relations Commission. It expands the commission's ability to resolve disputes between parties in the Western Australian workplace, introducing mediation as a method of resolution. The legislation prescribes the use of mediation where the parties consent in relation to a specific dispute, and other forms of dispute resolution including mediation where they have made a referral agreement empowering the commission to resolve particular disputes, or where a federal agreement allows the commission to conduct a dispute resolution process. Notwithstanding these broad opportunities for employment dispute resolution in Western Australia, the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) may limit the commission's ability to offer their services to all local workplace participants

    EU health and safety law: Improving standards for young workers

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    Understanding Employment Law: Concepts and Cases 3rd Edition

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    Dispute Settlement in the WTO - The Automotive Leather Dispute

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    United States - Australia Automotive Leather, sometimes known as Howe Leather, is a recent example of dispute settlement by the World Trade Organisation (WTO).' Although only five years old. the WTO dispute settlement system has been credited with legalising the relationship between the WTO and its Members2 and recognised as the reason for the "shifting of attention and resources" away from other tools available to them.' In this case, the system's processes and outcomes reveal something of the organisation's youthful direction..

    Regulating youth work: Lessons from Australia and the United Kingdom

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    The question of how to regulate the work performed by young people has attracted relatively little attention in some developed countries. This chapter explains Australian and British regulatory approaches to child employment, sampling two countries that might he considered to have few child labour problems. The chapter will comment on the appropriateness of a modern statement of rights for young workers in the context of discussion around various sources of regulation. Some of the failings of present frameworks are highlighted, and a set of goals and principles (based on those set out in Stewart 2008) arc put forward to guide the design of child employment regulation 1er developed economies. It is assumed that young workers will continue to play a role in contemporary labour markets, and that they require safeguards to assist them in benefiting from their first work experiences
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