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Searching by subject heading:You searched for: AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY in SUBJECT
Total 16 results of reference type: All found
Showing results from 1 to 20
#1 [more] | Akyeampong, Ernest. Flexible Work Arrangements. |
#2 [more] | Basok, Tanya. He Came, He Saw, He...stayed. Guest Worker Programmes and the Issue of Non-Return. |
#3 [more] | Bock, Bettina B., Sally Shorthall. Rural Gender Relations: Issues and Case Studies (2006). |
#4 [more] | Burawoy, Michael. The Functions and Reproduction of Migrant Labor: Comparative Material From Southern Africa and the United States. |
#5 [more] | Eaton, Susan C. Women Workers, Unions and Industrial Sectors in North America. |
#6 [more] | Frank, Dana. Women's Power is Union Power: Banana Worker Unions in Latin America. |
#7 [more] | Gringeri, Christina E. Inscribing Gender in Rural Development: Industrial Homework in Two Midwestern Communities. |
#8 [more] | Heather, Barbara, D. L. Skillen, Jennifer Young. Health Care Restructuring, Agricultural Reform, And Rural Women's Experiences of Paid and Unpaid Work. |
#9 [more] | Kubik, Wendee, Robert J. Moore. Health and Well-Being of Farm Women: Contradictory Roles in the Contemporary Economy. |
#10 [more] | Kubik, Wendee, Robert J. Moore. Women's Diverse Roles in the Farm Economy and the Consequences For Their Health, Well-Being and Quality of Life. |
#11 [more] | Lowell, Lindsay. Foreign Temporary Workers in America: Policies That Benefit the U.S. Economy. |
#12 [more] | Preibisch, Kerry. Gender Transformative Odysseys: Tracing the Experiences of Transnational Migrant Women in Rural Canada. |
#13 [more] | Raynolds, Laura T. Wages For Wives: Renegotiating Gender and Production Relations in Contract Farming in the Dominican Republic. |
#14 [more] | Satzewich, Vic. Racism and the Incorporation of Foreign Labour: Farm Labour Migration to Canada Since 1945. |
#15 [more] | Smart, Josephine. Borrowed Men on Borrowed Time: Globalization, Labour Migration and Local Economies in Alberta. |
#16 [more] | Tucker, Eric. Will the Vicious Circle of Precariousness be Unbroken? The Exclusion of Ontario Farm Workers From the Occupational Health and Safety Act. |