搜索结果: 1-6 共查到“法学 five years”相关记录6条 . 查询时间(0.125 秒)
Federal science and engineering funding for academic institutions sees first increase in five years
Federal science and engineering funding academic institutions first increase five years
2016/5/31
Federal agencies obligated $30.8 billion to 996 academic institutions for science and engineering (S&E) activities in Fiscal Year (FY) 2014, the most recent year for which such information is availabl...
Long-term Employment and Job Security over the Last Twenty-Five Years: A Comparative Study of Japan and the U.S.
long-term employment job security Great Recession Lost Decade Japan and the U.S.
2012/10/18
Taking advantage of a recent relaxation of Japanese government's data release policy, we conduct a cross-national analysis of micro data from Japan's Employment Status Survey and its U.S. counterpart,...
Onward and Upward:The Next Twenty-five Years of Comparative Labor Law Scholarship
Next Twenty-five Years Comparative Labor Law Scholarship
2009/11/5
In commemoration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of this Journal,
the editors have asked me to write about the next twenty-five years of
comparative labor law scholarship. I am pleased to do so. But...
Celebrating Twenty-five Years and Speculating Over the Future from a Brazilian Perspective
Twenty-five Years Future Brazilian Perspective
2009/11/5
If, back in 1980, one would speculate on how labor would be in
Brazil twenty-five years later, one would hardly guess that it would be
as it is today: flexible, precarious, and insecure, even though...
The Wagner-Peyser Act and U.S. Employment Service:Seventy-Five Years of Matching Job Seekers and Employers
The Wagner-Peyser Act U.S. Employment Service Job Seekers Employers
2009/11/5
The U.S. Employment Service was established 75 years ago by the Wagner-Peyser Act in
response to massive unemployment during the Great Depression. The Employment Service (ES)
started as an agency...
Singapore's ‘Three or More’Policy:The First Five Years
Singapore annual number of births The First Five Years
2009/4/10
Although this article does not attempt a full evaluation of the "selectively pro-natalist" national population policy of Singapore, it does bring out some indicative findings useful for assessing the ...