closed shop

listen to the pronunciation of closed shop
Englisch - Türkisch
Englisch - Englisch
a business or industrial establishment whose employees are required to be union members as a precondition to employment
business in which all employees are required to be members of a labor union (Economics)
a company that hires only union members
Where a firm agrees to employ only union members
A workplace in which all new hires must already be union members
An employer can hire only union members
a business that agrees to hire only those who are members of a union
A type of union that requires all employees belong to the union before being hired The employer agrees to retain only those employees who belong to the union Closed shops were deemed illegal by the Taft-Hartley Act
a closed shop is an arrangement that permits only union members to be hired
If a factory, shop, or other business is a closed shop, the employees must be members of a particular trade union. the trade union which they are required to join under the closed shop agreement. a company, factory etc where all the workers must belong to a particular trade union. Arrangement whereby a company employs only workers who are members in good standing of a specified labour union. It is the most rigid of the various schemes for protecting labour unions (more flexible arrangements include the union shop). Closed shops were declared illegal in the U.S. under the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, but in practice they continue to exist in some industries, such as construction
A union security clause wherein the employer can only hire and retain those workers who are already members of the union Hiring is usually done out of a hiring-hall
closed shop

    Türkische aussprache

    klōzd şäp

    Aussprache

    /ˈklōzd ˈsʜäp/ /ˈkloʊzd ˈʃɑːp/

    Etymologie

    [ 'klOz ] (verb.) 13th century. Middle English, from Old French clos-, stem of clore, from Latin claudere to shut, close; perhaps akin to Greek kleiein to close; more at CLAVICLE.
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