cover image: The Indian Journal of Social Work  March 1951

Premium

20.500.12592/frrt0j

The Indian Journal of Social Work March 1951

1951

The two together namely the emphasis upon individual ontract and the weak bargaining power of the labourers explain the vast misery of the wage earners in the first half of the ninteenth century. [...] The protests of these social reformers and the efforts of humanitarian employers spurred the state to abandon its doctrine of the survival of the fittest and non-inteference policy and adopt a more humanistic approach to the solution of social problems. [...] The growing political status of the labourers in the nineteenth century led to a firm recognition of the right to strike as one of the fundamental rights of the working class citizens. [...] On the application of either party or on the inititive of the Minister of Labour if he is satisfied that the dispute lies withigg the scope of the Act a Board of three members may be constituted to deal with the dispute. [...] The whole matter was reviewed in the light of the experience of the compulsory provisions of the war period and the Government of India passed the Industrial Disputes Act of 1947.
development
Published in
Unset
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-ii unknown view
Labour Jurisprudence—a Review
329-345 V. Jagannadham view
Vocational Guidance in Secondary Schools
346-352 R.N. Haldipur view
Children in Need—a Retrospect of Laws
353-364 D.V. Kulkarni view
Treatment and After-Care of Physivally Handicapped Child
365-371 Harold Balme view
Social case Worker and Physically Handicapped Child
372-380 Gauri Banerjee view
V.D. in the Industrial Worker—a Medico Social Study
381-387 M.N. Rao, H.C. Ganguli view
News and Notes
388-406 unknown view
Book Reviews
407-412 unknown view

Related Topics

All