Running Head: EMPLOYMENT-AT-WILL DOCTRINE 1 Employment-At-Will Doctrine 04/22/2013 Running Head: EMPLOYMENT-AT-WILL DOCTRINE 2 Jennifer is a recent graduate and has been hired by my accounting firm out of college. Upon being hired Jennifer has engaged in a number of different behaviors that need the accounting manager’s attention. The first situation is that Jennifer
Premium Employment Trade union Human resource management
aims at explaining the state of industrial conflict in Singapore presently. An employment relation is the relationship between managers and employees in an organisation which is usually informal – for example‚ between supervisors and subordinates. At the industrial level‚ the relationship between the management of an organisation and its union is more formal and referred as industrial relation which is a subset of employment relations (Tan‚ 2007). Industrial conflict is the total range of behaviour
Premium Trade union Labour relations
Running head: MORAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES OF TERMINATION Moral and Ethical Issues Involving Employment Terminations University of Phoenix MGT216 Moral and Ethical Issues Involving Employment Terminations When the decision is made to terminate an employee-employer relationship‚ the employer faces a far more daunting challenge than simply being able to terminate the employee‚ with or without due cause. Difficult steps must be taken to ensure that all precautions‚ legal and ethical‚ have been
Premium Employment Termination of employment Ethics
LG102 Principles of Commercial Law in Ireland 2007-2008 Dr Olivia Smith Employment Law: Identifying the Contract of Employment Reading: M. Forde‚ Employment Law 2nd ed. (Dublin: Roundhall Sweet and Maxwell‚ 2001) Chapter 2. History ▪ the move from status to contract. Query whether a move back to status? The protection afforded to individual employees under Irish employment law depends on a legal paradigm whereby the rights provided for are implied into the terms of the contract
Premium Employment Trade union
201: Understand employment responsibilities and rights in Health‚ Social care or Children and Young People’s settings Task 1 - Statutory responsibilities and rights of employees and employers Links to learning outcome 1‚ assessment criteria 1.1‚ 1.2‚ 1.3 and 1.4 List the aspects of employment covered by law Minimum wage Hours worked Discrimination Health and Safety Holiday entitlements Redundancy and Dismissal Training Disciplinary procedures Union rights and consultation List
Premium Employment Trade union
Agreements set out the conditions of employment between: an employee or group of employees their employer. From 1 January 2010‚ only enterprise agreements can be made between employees and employers. Other types of agreements made previously under the Workplace Relations Act 1996 cover the conditions of individual employees‚ or a group of employees. These include: collective agreements AWAs (Australian Workplace Agreements) ITEAs (Individual Transitional Employment Agreements). Those agreements made
Premium Employment Trade union Australia
it is company practice to promote employees from within. She states that each year she has received "outstanding performance" evaluation ratings since she has been employed there ABC has never given her a promotion and has repeatly pasted her over for any. Ms. Riyadh claims that all the male employees hired between 1978 and 1988 in same classification as she is have received a promotion from one to four times‚ and they also earn higher salaries. None of these employees have won
Premium Discrimination Employment Evidence
1.1 Almost every aspect of employment is covered by one or more laws‚ including: Handling and storage of information Equal opportunities Grievance procedures Health and safety Holiday entitlements Maternity/paternity pay Minimum wage Sickness absence and pay Working time limits Redundancy and retirement 1.2 Employment rights Equality and discrimination Health and Safety Data Protection 1.3 Legislation in relation to employment was created in order to prevent employers from abusing or
Premium Social work Sociology International Federation of Social Workers
EMPLOYMENT EQUITY Contents PAGE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 2 INTRODUCTION 2 WHAT IS EMPLOYMENT EQUITY 3 HOW DOES IT WORK 3 - 4 WHAT IS AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 5 IMPLEMENATION OF AFFIRMITIVE & EMPLOYMENT EQUITY 6 - 7 OBSTACLES & CHALLENGES 7 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 8 CONCLUSION 8 BIBLIOGRAPHY 9 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This assignment deals with the Employment Equity Act of 19 October 1998. It covers the workings of the act in terms of equity
Premium Discrimination Affirmative action Employment
Abstract As societies jails become increasingly over populated there seems to be a new question as to why people recommit crime and how to influence the desistance process. For those in the Criminal Justice fields theories on why individuals commit crimes are abundant. Society‚ biology‚ genes‚ and upbringing are all fair game in assessing the why a person commits crimes. Although understanding the etiological reasoning for crime is important‚ it has now become increasingly important to understand
Free Crime Criminal justice Criminal law