922 resultados para Labor Collective
Resumo:
Este trabalho se propõe a desvendar os contornos principiológicos e instrumentais daquilo que doravante iremos chamar Justo Processo Coletivo Laboral, ramo especialíssimo do processo dedicado à resolução de lides trabalhistas metaindividuais. O foco de nossas atenções é a tutela que é prestada em favor e não contra a coletividade. A falta de disposições específicas na CLT a respeito da tutela de direitos difusos, coletivos e individuais homogêneos próprios à realidade do trabalho torna imperiosa a inserção do Processo Trabalhista no circuito normativo de tutela coletiva, no chamado microssistema coletivo de tutela, composto, dentre outros diplomas, pelo Código de Defesa do Consumidor e pela Lei da Ação Civil Pública. A acomodação do Processo do Trabalho no ambiente coletivista será feita à luz da constelação de princípios constitucionais do processo e sob influxo do paradigma processual instrumental. A partir da identificação das principais barreiras que repelem o trabalhador do Poder Judiciário, procura-se demonstrar de que modo podem as ações coletivas contribuir para sua superação e assim para alavancar e universalizar o acesso à justiça, meta síntese para a qual convergem todos os esforços da processualística contemporânea. Apresentadas suas nuanças principiológicas, parte-se para a análise de seus principais institutos e do modo como deverá ser operacionalizado no dia-a-dia, isto é, de como irá funcionar. A crise de efetividade do processo de bases individualistas, especialmente para o trabalhador hipossuficiente, acentua a importância do devido processo legal coletivo do trabalho, instrumentalmente vocacionado a tornar justo o embate Capital X Trabalho e a conduzir grupos de trabalhadores de uma só vez à justa ordem jurídico-social.
Resumo:
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
Eficiência de produção segundo diferentes mecanismos de acesso à terra na reforma agrária brasileira
Resumo:
Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Energia na Agricultura) - FCA
Resumo:
The objective of this intervention study was to map instituted and instituting movements present in the work of the Family Health Strategy in the development of their care practices. The theoretical framework is based on institutional analysis, using the schizoanalytic approach. Group meetings were carried out with the staff to discuss how they provided collective care in continuing health education. The study subjects were professionals from the team and students who were engaged in academic activity in the service. The average attendance was twelve people per meeting, and there were a total of eight meetings from March to July 2010. Data were grouped into two immanent strata: the relationships of the team and the relationship with clients. The strata point to the intersection of education and legal institutions and the social and technical division of labor. Collective thinking in groups appeared to be effective in denaturalizing established processes and interrogating places, knowledge and practices.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Reproduced from type-written copy.
Resumo:
"BLMR 141."
Resumo:
Paged continuously. Spine title: Labor disputes and collective bargaining.
Resumo:
"This paper analyzes how expenditures of the city of San Francisco were altered in response to changes in municipal labor costs over the period 1945 through 1976. A hybrid of the "demands" and the "organizational" models of budgeting is used to measure the budgetary response to changes in the relative prices of labor inputs. Descriptive and econometric evidence reveals significant adjustments both among and within departments in reaction to changes in relative labor costs. The empirical evidence demonstrates that the city's budgetary process is guided by simple allocative rules modified by price-responsive adjustments."
Resumo:
Effective leaders are believed to inspire followers by providing inclusive visions of the future that followers can identify with. In the present study, we examined the neural mechanisms underlying this process, testing key hypotheses derived from transformational and social identity approaches to leadership. While undergoing functional MRI, supporters from the two major Australian political parties (Liberal vs. Labor) were presented with inspirational collective-oriented and noninspirational personal-oriented statements made by in-group and out-group leaders. Imaging data revealed that inspirational (rather than noninspirational) statements from in-group leaders were associated with increased activation in the bilateral rostral inferior parietal lobule, pars opercularis, and posterior midcingulate cortex: brain areas that are typically implicated in controlling semantic information processing. In contrast, for out-group leaders, greater activation in these areas was associated with noninspirational statements. In addition, noninspirational statements by in-group (but not out-group) leaders resulted in increased activation in the medial prefrontal cortex, an area typically associated with reasoning about a person’s mental state. These results show that followers processed identical statements qualitatively differently as a function of leaders’ group membership, thus demonstrating that shared identity acts as an amplifier for inspirational leadership communication.
Resumo:
Introduction The rapidly burgeoning popularity of cinema at the beginning of the 20th century favored industrialized modes of creativity organized around large production studios that could churn out a steady stream of narrative feature films. By the mid-1910s, a handful of Hollywood studios became leaders in the production, distribution, and exhibition of popular commercial movies. In order to serve incessant demand for new titles, the studios relied on a set of conventions that allowed them to regularize production and realize workplace efficiencies. This entailed a socialized mode of creativity that would later be adopted by radio and television broadcasters. It would also become a model for cinema and media production around the world, both for commercial and state-supported institutions. Even today the core tenets of industrialized creativity prevail in most large media enterprises. During the 1980s and 1990s, however, media industries began to change radically, driven by forces of neoliberalism, corporate conglomeration, globalization, and technological innovation. Today, screen media are created both by large-scale production units and by networked ensembles of talent and skilled labor. Moreover, digital media production may take place in small shops or via the collective labor of media users or fans who have attracted attention due to their hyphenated status as both producers and users of media (i.e., “prosumers”). Studies of screen media labor fall into five conceptual and methodological categories: historical studies of labor relations, ethnographically inspired investigations of workplace dynamics, critical analyses of the spatial and social organization of labor, and normative assessments of industrialized creativity.
Resumo:
Important advances in scholarship on the post-emancipation South have made possible a new synthesis that moves beyond broad generalizations about African American agency to identify both the shared elements in black life across the region and the varying capacity of freedpeople to assert their interests in the face of white hostility. Building on a number of recent studies of Reconstruction this article seeks to demonstrate that the varying capacity of freedpeople in South Carolina to shape and defend the new society that would emerge after the end of slavery was rooted in their relative strength at work and in their communities. In Charleston and its lowcountry rural hinterland, demographic strength combined with deeply-rooted traditions of collective assertion to sustain a remarkably vibrant grassroots movement that persisted beyond the overthrow of Reconstruction. From very early on, by contrast, former slaves dispersed across the rural interior found their freedom severely circumscribed by a bellicose and heavily-armed white paramilitary campaign.