The prospects for greater enforcement of teen employment laws in Alberta, Canada. "Politically, how do you make it relevant? en tuant davantage de jeunes!"/Las perspectivas de una mejor aplicacion de la ley sobre

This study uses a Delphi analysis to identify significant barriers to the development of sustained and meaningful pressure on the Alberta government to increase the enforcement of its laws regulating the employment of teenagers. In addition to general employment laws (e.g., wage payment, occupationa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Relations industrielles (Québec, Québec) Québec), 2015-06, Vol.70 (3), p.558
1. Verfasser: Barnetson, Bob
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study uses a Delphi analysis to identify significant barriers to the development of sustained and meaningful pressure on the Alberta government to increase the enforcement of its laws regulating the employment of teenagers. In addition to general employment laws (e.g., wage payment, occupational health and safety) that appear to go broadly unenforced, Alberta also appears not to enforce laws specifying the hours during which teens may work, the occupations in which they may work and the job tasks they may perform. The result is wage theft, workplace injury and illegal forms of employment among teens. The seven Delphi panelists--a mixture of academics, trade unionists and staff members in not-for-profit agencies with an interest in employment matters--identify a tight business-government relationship as an important limit on the political opportunities available to insurgents seeking change. Insurgents must also grapple with a framing that minimizes concerns around teen employment, i.e. by framing illegal or injurious work as an educational rite of passage and complaints as whining. Together, these barriers significantly limit the opportunities to pressure the state to enhance enforcement.
ISSN:0034-379X