labor union

listen to the pronunciation of labor union
English - Turkish
(Ticaret) çalışma saatleri
iş birliği
İşçi sendikası

İşçi sendikası grev ilan etti. - The labor union announced a strike.

Bir işçi sendikası düzenleyecekler. - They will organize a labor union.

işçi sendikası [amer.]
(Ticaret) ücret
işçi sendikası
labor union locals
yerel işçi sendikaları
labor union members
işçi sendika üyeleri
labor unions
işçi sendikaları
labour union
işçi sendikası
labor unions
sendika
labour union
amele birliği (osmanlıda)
labour union
amele birliği
English - English
A continuous association of wage-earners for the purpose of maintaining or improving the conditions of their employment; a trade union
union of workers who have joined together to protect their rights
A labor union is an organization that represents the rights and interests of workers to their employers, for example in order to improve working conditions or wages. An organization of wage earners formed for the purpose of serving the members' interests with respect to wages and working conditions. an organization that represents the ordinary workers in a particular trade or profession, especially in meetings with employers British Equivalent: trade union
labor unions
plural form of labor union
labour union
Alternative spelling of labor union
labour union
Association of workers in a particular trade, industry, or plant, formed to obtain improvements in pay, benefits, and working conditions through collective action. The first fraternal and self-help associations of labourers appeared in Britain in the 18th century, and the era of modern labour unions began in Britain, Europe, and the U.S. in the 19th century. The movement met with hostility from employers and governments, and union organizers were regularly prosecuted. British unionism received its legal foundation in the Trade-Union Act of 1871. In the U.S. the same effect was achieved more slowly through a series of court decisions that whittled away at the use of injunctions and conspiracy laws against unions. The founding of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) in 1886 marked the beginning of a successful, large-scale labour movement in the U.S. The unions brought together in the AFL were craft unions, which represented workers skilled in a particular craft or trade. Only a few early labour organizers argued in favour of industrial unions, which would represent all workers, skilled or unskilled, in a single industry. The Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) was founded by unions expelled from the AFL for attempting to organize unskilled workers, and by 1941 it had assured the success of industrial unionism by organizing the steel and automotive industries (see AFL-CIO). The use of collective bargaining to settle wages, working conditions, and disputes is standard in all noncommunist industrial countries, though union organization varies from country to country. In Britain, labour unions displayed a strong inclination to political activity that culminated in the formation of the Labour Party in 1906. In France, too, the major unions became highly politicized; the Confédération Générale du Travail (formed in 1895) was allied with the Communist Party for many years, while the Confédération Française Démocratique du Travail is more moderate politically. Japan developed a form of union organization known as enterprise unionism, which represents workers in a single plant or multiplant enterprise rather than within a craft or industry
labor union
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