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What is Labor Law?
| Laborlaw | Employment Law | Labor Law Lawyers
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Laborlaw
or employment law is the body of laws,
administrative rulings, and precedents which addresses the legal rights of,
and restrictions on, workers and their organizations.
As such, it mediates many aspects of the
relationship between trade unions, employers and employees. In some
countries (such as Canada), employment laws related to unionized
workplaces are differentiated from those relating to particular individuals.
In most countries however, no such distinction
is made. The labor movement has been instrumental in the enacting of laws
protecting labor rights in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Labor law arose due to the demands of
workers for better conditions and the right to organize, and the
simultaneous demands of employers to restrict the powers of workers'
organizations and keep labor costs low. Employers costs can increase due to
workers organizing to win higher wages, or by laws emposing costly
requirements, such as health and safety or equal opportunities conditions. |
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Workers' organizations, such as trade unions, can also transcend
purely industrial disputes, and gain political power - some people in
society may be opposed to this. The state of labor law at any one time is
therefore both the product of, and a component of the conditions for,
struggles between different interests in society. |
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For
example, workers' and trade union legal rights in the United States are
relatively restricted, compared to most European countries. However, the
compartmentalization between different laws systems mean that illegal
aliens, for example, may work in the same sectors as full citizens (although
they most often work in difficult and tiring jobs which natives don't want).
As
a counter-example, if labor laws are more protective in France, due
to social, historic and cultural differences, illegal aliens may not be
legally contracted. Thus, they have a more difficult time finding jobs and
often work in the underground economy. However, if they do manage to get
residency or, better yet, be naturalized, than they will get better labor
conditions than US immigrants.
Continue to search for LaborLaws:
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What is Labor Law?
| Laborlaw | Employment Law | Labor Law Lawyers
Labor Laws is also called Employment Laws.
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