Examples of right in the following topics:
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- Kennedy presented a speech to the United States Congress in which he extolled four basic consumer rights -- later called, The Consumer Bill of Rights .
- In 1985, these rights were expanded to eight by the United Nations.
- These eight rights are the:
- Kennedy extolled four basic consumer rights, later called the "Consumer Bill of Rights. "
- Summarize the Consumer Bill of Rights extolled by President John F.
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- The right to collectively bargain is recognized through international human rights conventions.
- Article 23 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights identifies the ability to organize trade unions as a fundamental human right.
- Item 2(a) of the International Labour Organization's Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work defines the "freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining" as an essential right of workers.
- The right-to-manage model, developed by the British school during the 1980s (Nickell), views the labor union and the firm bargaining over the wage rate according to a typical Nash Bargaining Maximin.
- Define the monopoly union model, the right-to-manage model, and the efficient bargaining model as theories of collective bargaining
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- White-only restaurants are an example of the type of discrimination that was outlawed as a result of the Civil Rights Act.
- Johnson, who would later sign the landmark Voting Rights Act into law.
- Expanded the Civil Rights Commission established by the earlier Civil Rights Act of 1957 with additional powers, rules and procedures.
- This was of crucial importance to civil rights activists who could not get a fair trial in state courts.
- Gives the jury rights to put any proceeding for criminal contempt arising under title II, III, IV, V, VI, or VII of the Civil Rights Act, on trial, and if convicted, can be fined no more than $1,000 or imprisoned for more than six months.
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- Scheduling is an operations decision that strives to provide the right mix of labor and machines to produce goods and services at the right time to achieve both efficiency and customer service goals.
- At colleges and universities, scheduling the right courses with the right number of classroom seats at the right times is critical to allowing students to graduate on time.
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- If your organization can afford to buy several years of its power in advance while awaiting payback, and if your business is situated in a location that receives adequate sunlight then, yes, solar power may be right for business.
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- Business logistics can be defined as "having the right item in the right quantity at the right time at the right place for the right price in the right condition to the right customer," and is the science of process and incorporates all industry sectors.
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- Theoretical ethics, sometimes called normative ethics, is about delineating right from wrong.
- It is the reflection on and definition of what is right, what is wrong, what is just, what is unjust, what is good, and what is bad in terms of human behavior.
- In the most basic terms, a definition for business ethics boils down to knowing the difference between right and wrong and choosing to do what is right.
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- These participants have legitimate interests in how the business is conducted and, therefore, they have legitimate rights over its affairs.
- They do not believe that workers or consumers have special rights over the property, other than the right not to be harmed by its use without their consent.
- Similarly, assuming the business has purveyed its goods honestly and with full disclosure, consumers have no inherent rights to govern the business, which belongs to someone else.
- People who subscribe to this view generally point out that a property owner's rights are constrained by morality.
- Similarly, a business does not have an unlimited right to pollute the air in the manufacturing process.
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- To promote the full flow of commerce, to prescribe the legitimate rights of both employees and employers in their relations affecting commerce.
- To provide orderly and peaceful procedures for preventing the interference by either with the legitimate rights of the other.
- To protect the rights of individual employees in their relations with labor organizations whose activities affect commerce.
- To protect the rights of the public in connection with labor disputes affecting commerce
- Union shops were heavily restricted, and states were allowed to pass right-to-work laws that outlawed closed union shops.
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- Licensing gives a licensee certain rights or resources to manufacture and/or market a certain product in a host country.
- To summarize, in this foreign market entry mode, a licensor in the home country makes limited rights or resources available to the licensee in the host country.
- The rights or resources may include patents, trademarks, managerial skills, technology, and others that can make it possible for the licensee to manufacture and sell in the host country a similar product to the one the licensor has already been producing and selling in the home country without requiring the licensor to open a new operation overseas.
- As in this mode of entry the transference of knowledge between the parental company and the licensee is strongly present, the decision of making an international license agreement depend on the respect the host government shows for intellectual property and on the ability of the licensor to choose the right partners and avoid having them compete in each other's market.