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NASH, EDMUND – 1967
IT WAS ESTIMATED BY THE SOVIET PRESS THAT, AS A RESULT OF A MARCH 1967 DECREE, ABOUT 82 PERCENT OF THE COUNTRY'S 80 MILLION WAGE AND SALARY WORKERS WOULD MOVE FROM THE TRADITIONAL 6 TO THE 5-DAY WORKWEEK BY NOVEMBER OF THE SAME YEAR. UNDER CERTAIN PRODUCTION AND WORKING CONDITIONS, THE PREVIOUS PATTERN OF A 7-HOUR WEEKDAY AND A 6-HOUR SATURDAY WAS…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Legislation, Labor Standards, Overtime
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brown, Emily Clark – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1973
The crucial assumption underlying new Soviet legislation is the existence of common interest of workers and management in production; stressing cooperation, consultation, and creative participation and an increase in the role of trade unions in decision making. (Editor)
Descriptors: Administration, Decision Making, Developed Nations, Labor Conditions
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Oswald, Rudy – Social Education, 1984
The American labor movement and labor groups from other developed nations have recognized the interdependence of the world's economies. Discussed are the AFL-CIO's support for labor in the Soviet Union, policies of developing nations to reduce inflation and the resulting worldwide recession, U.S. auto industry problems, and maintaining labor…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Economics, Global Approach, Inflation (Economics)