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International Relations
Globalisation drags up all sorts of contradictions, none the least the attitude of nation states to international law, as show by events in Australia this week.
Interview: Public Defender
The CPSU's Stephen Jones has confronted the Howard Government's IR agenda at close quarters.
Legal: Craig's Story
An inquest in western NSW is a cautionary tale of the use of AWAs, writes Ian Latham
Unions: Wrong Way, Go Back
The WorkChoice legislation sends Australia down the wrong economic road by smashing the instittutions that have made it strong, argues Greg Combet.
Industrial: WhatChoice?
The Howard Government has shown itself to be the master of illusion, writes Dr Anthony Forsyth
Politics: Queue Jumping
The changes to industrial laws, betray a new vision of Australian society, writes James Gallaway.
History: Iron Heel
Conservative governments using laws to take away basic civil rights. It's nothing new, writes Rowan Cahill
Economics: Waging War
When was the last time you heard an Australian politician talk about incomes policy, asks Matt Thistlethwaite
International: Under Pressure
The push for UN intervention in Burma is intensifying, following a report by Vaclav Havel and Bishop Desmond Tutu into slave labour.
Poetry: Billy Negotiates An AWA
More and more people are meeting Billy, the hero of page 15 of the WorkChoices booklet, including our resident bard, David Peetz
Review: A Pertinent Proposition
Nick Cave's "Australian western" touches on some themes still relevant today, Julianne Taverner writes.
Senators Back Rorters' Charter
Families Last in WorkChoices
Howard Loses Poll Position
Printers Stamp on Low Paid
Tough Men Back CFMEU
Kiwis Fly into Starbucks
Vale John Ducker
Iemma Drives Hardie Bargain
Memberships on the increase
Uni Union Shown The Door
In a Flap Over Flu
Job Cuts Threaten CBA's Bottom Line
Blackouts as Bosses Cut Deep
Barnaby's Choice
Wal-Mart Exposed
Activist's What's On!
The Soapbox
Men and Women of Australia
What makes a perfect speech? Michael Fullilove has scoured Australian history to find out. The Locker Room
The Hungry Years
Phil Doyle gets the feeling we�ve been here before Culture
From Little Things
Paul Kelly's song about the battle for land rights misses one important character, writes Graham Ring Parliament
The Westie Wing
Ian West takes a look at Public Private Partnerships, and wonders if we should all just drink rum�
Demonise the Laws
Name and Shame
Unite and Fight
The Worker's Best Friend
What Choices?
Stop the Corporate Rot
The Telemarketeers
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Labor Council of NSW
Vic Trades Hall Council
IT Workers Alliance
Bosswatch
Unions on LaborNET
Evatt Foundation
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News
Wal-Mart Exposed
Retail monolith Wal-Mart is circulating a cheat sheet to supervisors to deal with employee questions following the release of a film slamming the company's workplace practices.
The two-page script directs supervisors to impart the parent company's views about "hurtful untruths" in the movie, the Los Angeles Times reports.
"We believe they want to hurt our company's growth, sales momentum for the fourth quarter holiday season and, ultimately, each and every associate," the script says.
"Our critics will take everything they can and use it against us."
Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price challenges the retail chain's claims about its championing of workers, the community and the environment.
The film, by Robert Greenwald (Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism, Breaking Up), draws on interviews with small business owners, Wal-Mart managers and employees and environmental workers.
A free viewing of Wal-Mart: The High Cost of a Low Price will be held on Tuesday Decmber 6 at UTS Tower (Broadway, Sydney), Building 2, Level 4, Room 413. 4.30pm to 6.30pm.
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Issue 291 contents
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