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Qualitative Indicators of Labour Standards [electronic resource] : Comparative Methods and Applications / edited by David Kucera.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Social Indicators Research Series ; 30Editor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2007Descripción: V, 296 p. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781402053108
  • 99781402053108
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 300 23
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
and Overview -- Indicators of Labour Standards: An Overview and Comparison -- Country-level Assessments of Labour Conditions in Emerging Markets: An Approach for Institutional Investors -- Decent Work, Standards and Indicators -- The Quantification of Respect for Selected Core Labour Standards: Towards a Social Development Index? -- Measuring Trade Union Rights by Violations of These Rights -- Taking Labour Laws to the Domestic Dentist: Measuring Countries' Compliance with International Labour Non-discrimination Standards -- Towards an Index of Core Rights Gaps -- Employment Protection in Industrialized Countries: The Case for New Indicators -- Measuring Concealed Rights Violations: The Case of Forced Labour.
En: Springer eBooksResumen: Recent years have witnessed a rapidly growing interest in the use and construction of "qualitative" indicators of labour standards. Qualitative indicators, while generally having numerical values, are based on such methods as grading by experts, the coding of legislation, and the coding of other textual sources addressing violations of a more de facto nature. Measuring compliance with labour standards is an undertaking intrinsically fraught with difficulty. For there are a number of possible sources of measurement error, both random and non-random, that are unique to such indicators, on top of those that affect qualitative and quantitative indicators alike. The growing use of qualitative indicators of labour standards thus raises a number of questions about comparative methods of construction as well as the appropriateness of particular methods for particular applications. This volume results from a seminar that was organized by the International Labour Office (ILO) to address these and related questions, bringing together experts from the ILO, universities and NGOs.
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and Overview -- Indicators of Labour Standards: An Overview and Comparison -- Country-level Assessments of Labour Conditions in Emerging Markets: An Approach for Institutional Investors -- Decent Work, Standards and Indicators -- The Quantification of Respect for Selected Core Labour Standards: Towards a Social Development Index? -- Measuring Trade Union Rights by Violations of These Rights -- Taking Labour Laws to the Domestic Dentist: Measuring Countries' Compliance with International Labour Non-discrimination Standards -- Towards an Index of Core Rights Gaps -- Employment Protection in Industrialized Countries: The Case for New Indicators -- Measuring Concealed Rights Violations: The Case of Forced Labour.

Recent years have witnessed a rapidly growing interest in the use and construction of "qualitative" indicators of labour standards. Qualitative indicators, while generally having numerical values, are based on such methods as grading by experts, the coding of legislation, and the coding of other textual sources addressing violations of a more de facto nature. Measuring compliance with labour standards is an undertaking intrinsically fraught with difficulty. For there are a number of possible sources of measurement error, both random and non-random, that are unique to such indicators, on top of those that affect qualitative and quantitative indicators alike. The growing use of qualitative indicators of labour standards thus raises a number of questions about comparative methods of construction as well as the appropriateness of particular methods for particular applications. This volume results from a seminar that was organized by the International Labour Office (ILO) to address these and related questions, bringing together experts from the ILO, universities and NGOs.

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