Trades hall
A trades hall is a building where trade unions meet together, or work from cooperatively, as a local representative organisation, known as a labour council or trades hall council.[1] The term is commonly used in England, New Zealand, Scotland and Australia. They are sometimes called a union hall, or labour temple in North America (see, for instance, Finnish Labour Temple, Labor Temple Building, Union Hall (Danforth, Maine), etc.)
They are sometimes colloquially called "the worker's parliament".
See also
- Labour council
- Union Hall (disambiguation)
- Category:Trades halls in Australia
- Johannesburg Trades Hall
- Trades Hall of National Training School for Women and Girls
- Trades Hall, Glasgow
- v
- t
- e
Organised labour
- Labour history
- Labour rights
- Labour movement
- Trade union (public sector)
Structure |
|
---|---|
Models | |
Types |
relations
Shops and hiring | |||
---|---|---|---|
Actions |
| ||
Bargaining |
| ||
Compensation |
- 35-hour workweek
- Eight-hour day
- Six-hour day
- Four-day workweek
- Conflict theories
- Critique of work
- Decent work
- Diversity, equity, and inclusion
- Equal pay for equal work
- Exploitation of labour
- Forced labour
- Hunger strikes
- International comparisons of labour unions
- Job strain
- Labour code
- Labour law
- Minimum wage
- Maximum wage
- Prison strikes
- Professional abuse
- Protection
- Occupational safety and health
- Occupational stress
- Overwork
- Social support
- Wage slavery
- Workload
References
- ^ "The Victorian Trades Hall". Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
This article related to one or more trade or labor unions is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e