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Ziele und Wege einer Heimatsarbeitsgesetzgebung
1903
by
Schwiedland
Legal Theory
Social Policy
Insurance
Labor Market
Trade Unions
Karl Bucher
Guilds
Gustav Schmoller
Historical School
Lujo Brentano
Wilhelm Roscher
Labor Law
Karl Marx
Poverty
Interventionism
Standard of Living
Cooperatives
Bureaucracy
Social Democracy
Wages
Eugen von Philippovich
Innovation
Production Costs
Protectionism
Demography
Public Health
Table of Contents · 72 segments
1
Title Pages and Digitization Metadata
essay
2
Preface to the 1903 Expanded Second Edition
essay
3
Table of Contents
essay
4
Introductory Part: Historical Epochs of the Putting-Out System
chapter
5
Prerequisites and Origins of Verlag and Home Industry
theoretical
6
Nineteenth-Century Market Expansion and Spread of Verlag Work
chapter
7
Publishers, Factors, and Austrian Distribution of Home Industry
chapter
8
Statistical Capture of Home Industry in Switzerland, France, Belgium, Germany, and Austria
chapter
9
Forms of Verlag Industry: Dependent Small Masters and Sweating Contractors
theoretical
10
Forms, Definition, and Historical-Economic Development of Putting-Out Work
chapter
11
Workshop and Factory Objections to the Cost Advantages of Putting-Out Work
chapter
12
Low Wages, Worker Organization, and the Sweating System
chapter
13
Exploitation and Misery of Verlag Home Workers
chapter
14
Consumers, State Responsibility, and General Means of Reform
chapter
15
Registration of Home Workers and Employers
chapter
16
Extending Compulsory Worker Insurance to Verlag Work
chapter
17
Sanitary Policing of Dwellings and Workshops
chapter
18
Sanitary Police in Dwelling and Workshop
chapter
19
Licensing of Workplaces
chapter
20
Organization of Workers
chapter
21
Labor Protection and Home Work
chapter
22
Liability Mechanisms and Factory-Worker Home Work Restrictions
chapter
23
Special Provisions for Verlag Home Workers: Subcontracting, Materials, and Wage Documentation
chapter
24
Adapting Factory Protections to Home Industry and Family Workshops
chapter
25
Austrian Applications: Workrooms, Wages, Truck, Child Labor, Guilds, and Enforcement
chapter
26
Worker Protection and Home Work (Conclusion)
chapter
27
Abolition of Home Work
chapter
28
Restricting the Market for Home-Industry Products
chapter
29
Organization of Labor Placement (Opening)
chapter
30
Footnotes to Public Procurement and Fair-Wage Clauses
footnotes
31
Organization of Labor Placement (Continuation)
chapter
32
Establishment of Central Workshops (Opening)
chapter
33
Continuation: Subsidized Central Workshops for Home Workers
chapter
34
Immigration Restrictions and the Transition to Binding Minimum Wages
chapter
35
Binding Minimum Wages: Legal Instruments, Australian Models, and Early Debates
chapter
36
Australian Minimum-Wage Statutes and the Practical Setting of Wage Floors
chapter
37
Effects of Minimum-Wage Rules: Evasion, Safeguards, Apprentices, and Marginal Workers
chapter
38
Piecework, Geographic Differentiation, and Duration of Minimum-Wage Awards
chapter
39
Minimum Wages, Production Costs, Domestic Competition, and Export Industries
chapter
40
Authorities, Arbitration Enforcement, and German Proposals for Home-Work Wage Tariffs
chapter
41
Applying Minimum-Wage Law to European Home Industries and Publisher Competition
chapter
42
Binding Minimum Wages for Home Workers
chapter
43
Administrative Measures for Strengthening Home Industries
chapter
44
Social Assistance for Home Workers
chapter
45
Conclusion on Home Work Reform
chapter
46
Statistical Appendix A: France
chapter
47
Statistical Appendix B: German Reich Home Industry, 1895
chapter
48
Continuation and Conclusion of Industry-by-Industry Home-Work Statistics
chapter
49
Municipal Home-Industry Counts by Selected Industrial Branches
chapter
50
Statistical Overview: Urban Employment by Industry
chapter
51
Special Legislation against Homework: German Empire and Switzerland
chapter
52
England: Factory and Workshop Act Provisions on Homework
chapter
53
Canada: Ontario Regulation of Outwork in Clothing
chapter
54
Massachusetts: Tenement-Made Clothing and Licensing
chapter
55
New York: Labor Law on Licensed Home Work and Tenement Goods
chapter
56
Connecticut: Inspection of Residential Workshops
chapter
57
New Jersey and Maryland: Sweatshop, Licensing, and Sanitary Laws
chapter
58
Pennsylvania: Licensing, Registers, and Seizure of Unhealthy Goods
chapter
59
Ohio: Public Health Restrictions on Home Production
chapter
60
Indiana: Licensing of Home Production in Listed Trades
chapter
61
Michigan: Residential Work Permits and Infection Control
chapter
62
Wisconsin: Sanitary Law and Cigar Production Rules
chapter
63
Illinois: Anti-Sweating Law and Public Health Critique
chapter
64
Missouri: Residential Workshop Rules and Labeling
chapter
65
New Zealand: Factory Act Provisions against Sweating and Infection
chapter
66
Victoria: Factory Acts, Outwork Lists, and Wage Boards
chapter
67
New South Wales, Queensland, and South Australia: Outworker Lists and Inspector Access
chapter
68
Central Workshops for Putting-Out Workers
chapter
69
Central workshops continued: Swiss tailor ateliers and union financing
chapter
70
Austrian home-worker groups in meerschaum, pipe, and button turning
chapter
71
Employer-maintained collective workshop in Munich
chapter
72
Municipally subsidized Bern workshop and conclusions on central workshops
chapter