Sentences with phrase «what human workers»

Not exact matches

What they give up is the cost advantage that comes with lower wages for human workers.
«Human nature kicks in, and he did what I hope most men would do,» said the head of the transit workers union in Oroc's defense.
What design principles and techniques can help human workers deal with advances in workplace automation and artificial intelligence?
I have stressed that we are called as humans to be what St. Paul styled «fellow - workers with God.»
This is what James Eadie QC, Cameron's Government's expensive barrister, told the court (on his behalf): that the refusal to allow an NHS nurse and a British Airways worker to visibly wear a crucifix at work «did not prevent either of them practising religion in private», which would be protected by human rights law.
now to the topic: yeah i get what you mean a fan shouldnt think of the club as a brand but if fans think about the manager or player of a club they should and have to consider them as humans / workers of a brand just because we love the club its not right to bash blame and insult them because of failure, what we can do is demand change, expressing our disliking and / or criticising them constructively but insulting and offending them is a no - go.
And with climate change laws, human rights and workers» rights yet again on the table, what faith would anyone place in ministers maintaining these fundamental protections under deals done in the dark?
Competence models, done by organizational human resources to identify what factors make someone a standout performer, ignore IQ and school performance — they are irrelevant by the time you are competing with others on the job, where emotional intelligence skills like self - awareness, self - management, empathy, teamwork, and the like identify the best workers.
What can we do as educational and cultural workers, at this crucial moment in history, when corporate revenue expands as the job market shrinks, when there is such a callous disregard for human suffering and human life, when the indomitable human spirit gasps for air in an atmosphere of intellectual paralysis, social amnesia, and political quiescence, when the translucent hues of hope seem ever more ethereal, when thinking about the future seems anachronistic, when the concept of utopia has become irretrievably Disneyfied, when our social roles as citizens have become increasingly corporatized and instrumentalized in a world which hides necessity in the name of consumer desire, when media analyses of military invasions is just another infomercial for the US military industrial complex with its huge global arms industry, and when teachers and students alike wallow in absurdity, waiting for the junkyard of consumer life to vomit up yet another panacea for despair?
What do you expect from a bunch of despicable human rights violators who conduct mass retaliatory firings after workers contact the media about cockroach infested work environs and atrocious working conditions?
What I found interesting about the proposed law is that it would have amended the Workers Compensation Act, not the Human Rights Code (or whatever it is called in BC), which is what I would have expecWhat I found interesting about the proposed law is that it would have amended the Workers Compensation Act, not the Human Rights Code (or whatever it is called in BC), which is what I would have expecwhat I would have expected.
With summer vacation season now in full swing, workers should know what vacation benefits they're entitled to, says Toronto labour, employment, and human rights lawyer — read more...
«What I've been working on in my lab for years is to combine the intelligence of the [human] worker with the strength of the robot,» Homayoon Kazerooni, director of the Berkeley Robotics and Human Engineering Laboratory, told Digital Trhuman] worker with the strength of the robot,» Homayoon Kazerooni, director of the Berkeley Robotics and Human Engineering Laboratory, told Digital TrHuman Engineering Laboratory, told Digital Trends.
But I address each and any one of you who has set out to serve people in one way or another — physicians, nurses, rehabilitation and occupational therapists, teachers, mental health workers (psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers — whether professionals, paraprofessionals, or aides), child care workers of all sorts, family welfare workers and family counselors, recreation leaders, specialists in work with the aged — what a diversity and richness of human services there are!
I presume to address you all because as a social worker I have worked in collaboration with almost every other sort of helper and have come to know something of what is involved in the many special forms of human services.
Despite being digital natives, young workers want human interaction and engagement with co-workers — and are willing to trade what was previously considered a perk.
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