The article looks critically at the Insolvency Act prior to the amendments of 2002 and the limited protection it gave workers on the insolvency of their employer. The effect of the Act was that workers’ contracts of employment were automatically terminated by their employer’s insolvency, leaving them with a limited preferent claim against the employer’s insolvent estate. Since certain other creditors (such as the Revenue Service) ranked higher than employees, there was often little left for workers to recover. Another problem was that workers often had no warning of their employer’s insolvency, giving them no opportunity to make representations to save the company – and their jobs. Under pressure from organised labour, the 2002 amendments t...
76 pagesPart I of this Article examines the evolving law of employment discharge. This part highlig...
This article diagnoses the conceptual and normative crisis of the scope of labour protection as resu...
This Article addresses the problem of “mid-term” modification of employment—the common employer prac...
The article looks critically at the Insolvency Act prior to the amendments of 2002 and the limited p...
This thesis considers how Dworkin’s interpretative approach to law may be used to resolve the uncert...
The article consists of four parts. Part I presents a historical outlook at the norms pertaining to...
Individual Dismissal and Incentives This article presents a survey of the literature which analyses...
When a company faced with financial difficulties finally enters formal insolvency, several creditor ...
In New Zealand, scarcely a week goes by without news of workers who, due to the insolvency of their ...
The aim of the article is to state the main problems concerning employment termination with an emplo...
On 1 September 2013, a new Employee Shareholder status came into force in the UK. Under its provisio...
This article considers the issues that arise when a worker becomes incapacitated for work and the co...
The International Labour Organisation notes that globally there is “a general increase in the precar...
The maxim "easy to hire difficult to fire" is the terminology which most of the employer should prac...
When an employer becomes insolvent, employees\u2019 claims for unpaid wages and contributions may be...
76 pagesPart I of this Article examines the evolving law of employment discharge. This part highlig...
This article diagnoses the conceptual and normative crisis of the scope of labour protection as resu...
This Article addresses the problem of “mid-term” modification of employment—the common employer prac...
The article looks critically at the Insolvency Act prior to the amendments of 2002 and the limited p...
This thesis considers how Dworkin’s interpretative approach to law may be used to resolve the uncert...
The article consists of four parts. Part I presents a historical outlook at the norms pertaining to...
Individual Dismissal and Incentives This article presents a survey of the literature which analyses...
When a company faced with financial difficulties finally enters formal insolvency, several creditor ...
In New Zealand, scarcely a week goes by without news of workers who, due to the insolvency of their ...
The aim of the article is to state the main problems concerning employment termination with an emplo...
On 1 September 2013, a new Employee Shareholder status came into force in the UK. Under its provisio...
This article considers the issues that arise when a worker becomes incapacitated for work and the co...
The International Labour Organisation notes that globally there is “a general increase in the precar...
The maxim "easy to hire difficult to fire" is the terminology which most of the employer should prac...
When an employer becomes insolvent, employees\u2019 claims for unpaid wages and contributions may be...
76 pagesPart I of this Article examines the evolving law of employment discharge. This part highlig...
This article diagnoses the conceptual and normative crisis of the scope of labour protection as resu...
This Article addresses the problem of “mid-term” modification of employment—the common employer prac...