The objective of the article is to track the part played by self-employed or independent contractors in shaping the wage contract. A petite bourgeoisie class that cannot be a party to an employment contract has been influential in shaping its judicial design. The reality is that in both English and Australian doctrine the judiciary has utilised the distinction between independent contractors and workers as the benchmark for categorising those embraced by an employment contract. The article argues that this state of affairs has resulted in a long standing judicial failure to provide a lucid exposition of the economic characteristics of the self-employed and wage earners, and that this has produced over an extensive historical period a series...
This article presents a comparative analysis of six countries (France, Germany, Italy, Slovakia, the...
Prompted by the Australian High Court’s decision in Commonwealth Bank of Australia v. Barker,1 this ...
The chapters interrogate the legal reasoning by which U.S. courts and administrative agencies are re...
In this paper, the authors consider whether the contract of employment should continue to be the cen...
Self-employed workers have an legal ambiguous status. Traditionally self-employment is equated with ...
The distinction between employees and independent contractors is crucial in determining the scope of...
The concept of employment at common law serves as a gateway to a wide range of statutory labour righ...
The narrow definition of contract of employment developed by the common law tests has given room for...
While the relationship between statute and common law has attracted increased interest in the labour...
U.S. employment law has traditionally disfavored bright-line rules to distinguish between traditiona...
The article examines the role of trade unions in relation to the difficult question of which workers...
This article assesses the extent to which the UK's Supreme Court (UKSC) rulings in Uber and Pimlico ...
An inquiry into sham contracting conducted by the Australia Building and Construction Commission has...
A major issue in the sharing economy is the legal category of parties providing services through pla...
This article examines the concept of the ‘employer’ in Australian labour law, showing how the use of...
This article presents a comparative analysis of six countries (France, Germany, Italy, Slovakia, the...
Prompted by the Australian High Court’s decision in Commonwealth Bank of Australia v. Barker,1 this ...
The chapters interrogate the legal reasoning by which U.S. courts and administrative agencies are re...
In this paper, the authors consider whether the contract of employment should continue to be the cen...
Self-employed workers have an legal ambiguous status. Traditionally self-employment is equated with ...
The distinction between employees and independent contractors is crucial in determining the scope of...
The concept of employment at common law serves as a gateway to a wide range of statutory labour righ...
The narrow definition of contract of employment developed by the common law tests has given room for...
While the relationship between statute and common law has attracted increased interest in the labour...
U.S. employment law has traditionally disfavored bright-line rules to distinguish between traditiona...
The article examines the role of trade unions in relation to the difficult question of which workers...
This article assesses the extent to which the UK's Supreme Court (UKSC) rulings in Uber and Pimlico ...
An inquiry into sham contracting conducted by the Australia Building and Construction Commission has...
A major issue in the sharing economy is the legal category of parties providing services through pla...
This article examines the concept of the ‘employer’ in Australian labour law, showing how the use of...
This article presents a comparative analysis of six countries (France, Germany, Italy, Slovakia, the...
Prompted by the Australian High Court’s decision in Commonwealth Bank of Australia v. Barker,1 this ...
The chapters interrogate the legal reasoning by which U.S. courts and administrative agencies are re...