Centrow Labour Market Regulation
Podcast by Centrow UWC
The University of the Western Cape (UWC) Centre for Transformative Regulation of Work (CENTROW) Webinar Series enables participants in South African l...
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6 episodesSpeaker: Adelle Blackett - Prof. of Law at McGill University, Canada Research Chair in Transnational Labour Law and Development, Centrow Associate. Prof. Blackett served as the lead International Labour Organization (ILO) expert in a treaty-making process for Convention 189 on decent work for domestic workers, and preparing a draft Haitian labour code. Respondent: Kelebogile Khounou – Researcher: Socio-Economic Rights Institute (SERI). Ms Khounou’s Masters research was based on domestic workers’ engagement with everyday life, their social networks and the building of their political subjectivities. Ms Khounou has worked intensely on the campaign for inclusion of domestic workers under COIDA.
Speaker: Prof Edoardo Ales, Professor of Labour Law and Industrial Relations, University of Naples and Extraordinary Professor, UWC ‘ILO standards and the right to collective bargaining for self-employed workers in the EU: lessons for South Africa?’ Respondent: Mario Jacobs, Researcher and Programme Convenor Labour, Development and Governance Research Unit (LDG), University of Cape Town and former trade union official with more than 20 years’ experience
CENTROW Webinar Series: Rethinking Collective Bargaining & Organisational Rights: Trade union and collective bargaining rights for workers who are not employees: organisational and constitutional issues' Founded 17 May 2018, TUMSA – Trade Union for Musicians of South Africa – established its National Head Office in Cape Town, South Africa. TUMSA regards itself as an authentic and representative Trade Union. TUMSA members are employees and self-employed workers who are dependent on music for their primary source of income. Gabi Le Roux is the General Secretary for TUMSA.
Prof Miriam Cherry obtained her doctorate at Harvard Law School after which she clerked for Justice Roderick Ireland of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts and then for Judge Gerald Heaney of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. In 2001, she joined the Boston law firm of Foley Hoag LLP, where she practiced corporate law with an emphasis on mergers and acquisitions, securities compliance filings, venture capital, and private debt financing. She was also associated with the firm of Berman, DeValerio & Pease, where she took part in litigating several accounting fraud cases including those against former telecom giant WorldCom and Symbol Technologies, which resulted in a $139 million settlement. Academically, Professor Cherry has been on the faculty or visited at a number of law schools, including the University of Georgia, University of the Pacific - McGeorge School of Law, and Cumberland School of Law. In 2008, she was elected a member of the American Law Institute. Currently she is Co-Director of the William C. Wefel Center for Employment Law and Associate Dean for Research and Engagement at St Louis University School of Law. Her research is interdisciplinary, focusing on the intersection of technology and globalisation with business, contract, and employment law topics. In her recent work, she analyses crowdfunding, markets for corporate social responsibility, virtual work, and social entrepreneurship. Her publications have appeared in the North western Law Review, Minnesota Law Review, Washington Law Review, Illinois Law Review, Georgia Law Review, Alabama Law Review, Maryland Law Review, and the Tulane Law Review, among others.
Prof Nicola Countouris is the Director of the Research Department at the European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) in Brussels and a Professor in Labour Law and European Law at the Faculty of Laws of University College London (UCL). He is a prolific author having written or co-written some 55 publications, including the definitive work “The Legal Construction of Personal Work Relations” co-authored with Mark Freedland (who was Nicola’s PhD supervisor) and published by Oxford University Press in 2011. He has acted as an independent expert for the International Labour Office, the ETUC, and on a number of European Commission funded projects. Nicola’s role at the ETUI, an independent research and training centre of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), places him at the cutting-edge of regulatory debates aimed at strengthening the social dimension of the European Union
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