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Bosch, Gerhard – International Labour Review, 1999
Examines issues of working time starting with International Labor Organization standards and reports on changes and the forces driving them. Outlines conditions in which working-time reductions are likely to affect employment positively and concludes with topics for further analysis. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Flexible Working Hours, Standards, Tables (Data), Working Hours
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van Ginneken, Wouter – International Labour Review, 1984
Analyzes the impact of a reduced work week on employment, productivity, wages, investment, economic growth, inflation, and government deficits. Concludes that reducing working hours would have greater effect if accompanied by wage reductions and limitation of overtime, but would not affect underlying causes of unemployment. (SK)
Descriptors: Models, Productivity, Unemployment, Working Hours
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Olmsted, Barney – International Labour Review, 1983
This article addresses the increase in voluntary reduced work time arrangements that have developed in the United States in response to growing interest in alternatives to the standardized approach to scheduling. Permanent part-time employment, job sharing, and voluntary reduced work time plans are defined, described and, to a limited extent,…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Opportunities, Flexible Working Hours, Job Development
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Bosch, Gerhard – International Labour Review, 1990
Reviews developments in the shortened work week in the Federal Republic of Germany. Discusses collective agreements and examines the methods used to implement the shorter working week at enterprise level and possible developments in the reunited Germany. (JOW)
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Economic Factors, Flexible Working Hours, Foreign Countries
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Elder, Sara; Johnson, Lawrence Jeffrey – International Labour Review, 1999
Data indicate that women's experience in the labor market is substantially different from men's. Women work in different sectors for fewer hours; women have lower rates of education and literacy; and women are more likely to be unemployed, underemployed, or outside the labor force. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Labor Market
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Roche, William K.; And Others – International Labour Review, 1996
Study of the employment effects of reducing working hours, controlling overtime, job sharing, leave, and early retirement in 10 countries found no significant link between job sharing and employment levels. Work time policies need to be considered in a wider context as a way to address high unemployment. (SK)
Descriptors: Early Retirement, Employment Level, Foreign Countries, Job Development
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Ratner, Ronnie Steinberg – International Labour Review, 1980
The author focuses on laws governing maximum working hours, explaining how their coverage became restricted to women and children and how organized labor showed renewed interest in universal hour laws during the Depression. She advances three hypotheses to explain how laws that once were protective became restrictive. (CT)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Discriminatory Legislation, Employed Women, Labor Conditions
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Carnoy, Martin – International Labour Review, 1999
Because of women's increased participation in the labor market, there is an increasing pressure on families. Women are expected to provide stability, focus on child development, and bolster colleagues against unemployment and retraining, whereas society is expected to provide child care facilities and flexible education. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Family (Sociological Unit), Family Work Relationship, Females
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Di Martino, Vittorio; Wirth, Linda – International Labour Review, 1990
Defines telework as online or offline electronic work performed at home or in central offices, customer sites, and satellite centers. Examines the nature, extent, and impact of telework on working conditions, work organization and explores the legal status of teleworkers, changing attitudes of employers and trade unions, and government…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Employer Attitudes, Employment Patterns, Flexible Working Hours
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Rubery, Jill; Grimshaw, Damian – International Labour Review, 2001
The impact of information and communications technologies on jobs is not yet known and no outcome is inevitable. Technology-driven changes in organizational structures, employment relations, worker autonomy, and work organization will not automatically result in higher job quality. (Contains 92 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Information Technology, Job Skills