2016/2.
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José María MIRANDA BOTO:
The competence of the EU concerning the right to strike
The article examines the issue, whether the right to strike should be regulated at European level, or not.
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Carol Daugherty RASNIC:
What the German Bundestag might have learned from the U.S. Congress on workers' right to strike
This article draws comparisons regarding the right to strike between the German Constitution (Grundgesetz) and labor legislation pre-July 1, 2015, and the U.S.A’s 1926 Railway Labor Act and 1935 Wagner Act (as amended by the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act).
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Piotr GRZEBYK:
Justifications of the right to strike: from the rule of force to the rule of law
The paper describes two perspectives in which the values inherent in strikes may be decoded: a state-oriented perspective and an individual-oriented (human rights) perspective. Only some parts focus on Polish regulations, but most of the findings are of universal character.
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Andrzej Marian ŚWIĄTKOWSKI:
Free Movement of Labour - A Polish Perspective
The article highlights certain peculiarities relating to how the fundamental freedom of movement of persons within the European Union is understood by the Polish jurisprudence and labour law doctrine. In the Polish text of primary European law free movement was guaranteed to employees and not to a wider range of workers.
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Eddie KEANE:
Are Collaborative Workers Employees?
This article discusses how new forms of working relationships, in particular the type introduced by the phenomenon of internet based work-sharing, might be categorised.
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Zoltán BANKÓ:
Telework in Hungary - Legislative, Jurisdictionary and Labour Market Policy Experiences
The study reviews the changes in the Hungarian regulation of telework, the legal background in the European Union, and the evaluation and experience on telework employment in Hungary.
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