Academic literature on the topic 'Wages Inspectorate'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wages Inspectorate"

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Degtyareva, Ekaterina. "The Situation of SME Workers as a Result of the Pandemic." Management of the Personnel and Intellectual Resources in Russia 10, no. 2 (May 26, 2021): 65–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/2305-7807-2021-10-2-65-70.

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The article considers the problems associated with the consequences of the pandemic for employees of small and medium enterprises in the Moscow region, namely a reduction in their wages and termination of the employment contract due to a reduction of the wage Fund SMEs, despite government measures. The article presents statistics on dismissals of employees in SMEs, data on the volume of labor violations in the Moscow region at SME enterprises, the volume of citizens ' appeals to the labor inspectorate. Innovations in the Russian labor legislation introduced due to the pandemic, as well as violations of the Labor Code of the Russian Federation, are considered. They also discussed current measures to support small and medium-sized enterprises in order to save jobs, as well as measures to support families who are in a difficult situation due to job loss. The article defines the ways for SMEs to get out of the crisis situation with their personnel in order to preserve it, by reducing working hours and emotional support for employees.
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Williams, H. G. "Nation State versus National Identity: State and Inspectorate in Mid-Victorian Wales." History of Education Quarterly 40, no. 2 (2000): 145. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/369534.

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Park, Sun-Young. "Inspections of Juvenile Establishments for Protecting Children’s Rights: HM Inspectorate of Prisons for England and Wales." 교정담론 15, no. 1 (April 30, 2021): 121–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.46626/affc.2021.15.1.5.

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Hubbard, Philip. "Law, sex and the city: regulating sexual entertainment venues in England and Wales." International Journal of Law in the Built Environment 7, no. 1 (April 13, 2015): 5–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijlbe-01-2014-0001.

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Purpose – This paper aims to explore how municipal law, in its various guises, serves to police the boundaries of acceptable sexual conduct by considering how Sexual Entertainment Venues (SEVs) in British cities are controlled through diverse techniques of licensing and planning control. Design/methodology/approach – The paper describes the emergence of permissive new licensing controls that provide local authorities considerable control over SEVs. Licensing decisions, judicial review cases and planning inspectorate adjudications since the inception of the new powers are examined to explore the logic of judgements preventing SEVs operating in specific localities. Findings – Through analysis of case studies, it is shown that local authorities have almost total discretion to prevent SEVs operating in specific localities, particularly those undergoing, or anticipated to be undergoing, redevelopment and regeneration. Originality/value – This paper offers unique insights on the “scope” of municipal law by highlighting how land uses associated with “sexual minority” interests are regulated in the interests of urban regeneration, redevelopment and restructuring.
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Barn, Ravinder, Martina Feilzer, and Nick Hardwick. "Black and Minority Ethnic Boys and Custody in England and Wales: Understanding Subjective Experiences through an Analysis of Official Data." Social Sciences 7, no. 11 (November 8, 2018): 226. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci7110226.

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Recent years have seen a dramatic shift in youth justice outcomes and a fall in the number of children drawn into the youth justice system in England and Wales. However, it appears that children from some backgrounds have not benefited as much as others from this change. There is a wealth of academic literature on processes of criminalisation, policies, and practices of youth justice and the experiences of children, particularly boys, in custody. However, there is little detailed understanding of how these processes, policies, and practices affect children from different backgrounds. This paper examines the most intrusive aspect of youth justice, namely, custodial sentences. Through an examination of the Inspectorate of Prisons’ reports and associated surveys, this paper seeks to explore black and minority ethnic boys’ perceptions of their experiences of custody.
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Sim, Joe. "Aching desolation: Liverpool prison and the regressive limits of penal reform in England and Wales." Critical and Radical Social Work 7, no. 1 (March 30, 2019): 41–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/204986019x15491042559709.

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This article explores the current penal crisis through a case study of Liverpool prison, and the appalling nature of the prison's regime, as documented in January 2018 by HM Inspectorate of Prisons. The dehumanising nature of the regime was not unique as a number of other prisons inspected during 2018 were also shown to be seriously detrimental to the health and safety of prisoners. The article also explores the problematic nature of the state's response to the crisis and the limitations of that response. This raises a number of theoretical and political questions about the abject failure over two centuries of liberal reform. In turn, this failure raises questions about the future, beginning with recognising that the prison should be understood as an institution of the neoliberal state, which is oriented towards criminalising and controlling those on the economic and political margins of a deeply divided, fractured social order.
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Fisher, T. J. "Developments in Industrial Effluent Control in the United Kingdom." Water Science and Technology 29, no. 9 (May 1, 1994): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.1994.0431.

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Since 1974 controls on industrial effluent dischargers in the United Kingdom have increased significantly. The Water Act 1989 transferred the Water Industry in England and Wales to the private sector and created a National Rivers Authority. A mechanism to control the input of dangerous and harmful substances into the aquatic environment was established which requires Water Service Companies (WSCs) to refer to the Secretary of State for the Environment before granting consents for discharge to public sewer. The Environmental protection Act 1990 (EPA) further increased regulation and established the principle of Integrated Pollution Control (IPC). Operators of industrial processes listed under the Act are required to obtain authorisation from Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Pollution (HMIP) (HMIPI in Scotland) before they can operate the process. The complexity of legislation and regulation is described and practical difficulties experienced when implementing the controls are examined, as are the relationships between the main environmental regulators together with their relative responsibilities. Also discussed are the costs associated with licensing and effluent disposal.
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Maguire, Mike, and Peter Raynor. "Offender management in and after prison: The end of ‘end to end’?" Criminology & Criminal Justice 17, no. 2 (September 19, 2016): 138–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748895816665435.

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In 2013 a joint report by the Inspectorates of Probation and Prisons in England and Wales concluded that offender management in prisons was ‘not working’ and called for a fundamental review. This article considers why existing arrangements have failed and draws upon theory and research on resettlement, case management and desistance from crime, to define what a more effective system of ‘rehabilitative resettlement’ – both inside prison and ‘through the gate’ – might look like. It also comments on emerging proposals for radical change, including abandonment of the ‘end to end’ model of offender management by an outside probation officer and the development of ‘rehabilitative prisons’, in which more responsibility is placed on prisoners for managing their own rehabilitation, and a formal motivational role is created for large numbers of prison staff.
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Hayes, C. R., S. Incledion, and M. Balch. "Experience in Wales (UK) of the optimisation of ortho-phosphate dosing for controlling lead in drinking water." Journal of Water and Health 6, no. 2 (January 1, 2008): 177–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wh.2008.044.

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Dwr Cymru Welsh Water supplies over three million people with drinking water throughout most of Wales (UK). Ortho-phosphate has increasingly been dosed at around 1 mg/L (P) to further reduce the corrosivity of supplies to the lead pipes which connect approximately 30% of houses to water mains in the company's area, additional to long-establish pH adjustment measures. The installation of new ortho-phosphate dosing schemes and the optimisation of these and existing dosing schemes, 29 schemes in total, were subject to a regulatory programme of work, agreed with the Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI). Optimisation comprised (i) selection of appropriate ortho-phosphate doses by a procedure involving laboratory based plumbosolvency testing linked to zonal lead emission (compliance) modelling, (ii) tight dose control and (iii) extensive monitoring of lead in supply by random daytime (RDT) sampling and by the use of lead pipe test rigs. The successful outcome was confirmed by 99% of over 5,000 RDT samples complying with the future standard of 10 μg/L for lead in drinking water.
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Glorney, Emily, Hana Ullah, and Charlie Brooker. "Standards of Mental Health Care in Prisons in England and Wales: A Qualitative Study of Reports from Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Prisons." International Journal of Forensic Mental Health 19, no. 3 (March 26, 2020): 283–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14999013.2020.1743389.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Wages Inspectorate"

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Dunford, John E. "The modern Inspectorate : Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Schools in England and Wales, 1944-1991." Thesis, Durham University, 1992. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/1146/.

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Wilson, Bryan B. "Her Majesty's inspectorates in the education and police services of England and Wales : comparative patterns of conflict and accommodation." Thesis, University of Northampton, 2001. http://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/2808/.

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This research is an empirically based, comparative study of the inspectorates in two high profile areas of public concern, the education and police services and explores the realities and complexities of an increasingly politically favoured instrument, inspection, in regulation regimes. It uses case study methodology and data collected by semi-structured interviews and textual analysis of literature, and reports and other documents published by the two inspectorates and associated organisations. The study has the aims of contextualising the role and place of the inspectorates and of establishing if they are an aid to the achievement of accountability; whether they are independent assessors; and whether any aid given could be extended to a wider population of ”stakeholders”. It seeks to identify ways that any benefits given could be increased and to relate the findings to other scholarship and draw out new insights, particularly those relating to the factors which determine the nature of the regime. Considerably more conflict was revealed than might be expected within and between organisations commonly funded by the public purse. Four methods of resolving this were detected, “co-operation”, “constraint”, “collaboration” and “compromise”. The inspectorates give definite assistance to the accountable parties by the information they provide but this is restricted by their being agents of Central Government control rather than independent assessors. Greater assistance would be given (including that offered to a wider population of stakeholders) if they were made truly independent. Multiple factors were found to determine the punitive nature of regimes, by far the most important being Central Government’s attitude and wishes. Intensive, rigorous inspection is seen as the favoured way ahead in the short term but its extensive use in the longer term is challenged, given an improvement in the line management of public services and the establishment and extension of the use and influence of credible Performance Indicators
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Books on the topic "Wages Inspectorate"

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Howson, John. Directory of HMI Reports for England, Wales and Scotland. Oxford: Education DataSurveys, 1985.

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Howson, John. Directory of HMI reports for England, Wales and Scotland. Oxford: Education Data Surveys, 1986.

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Howson, John. Directory of HMI reports for England, Wales and Scotland. Oxford: Education Data Surveys, 1985.

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Howson, John. Directory of HMI reports for England, Wales and Scotland. Oxford: Education Data Surveys, 1986.

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Inspectorate, Great Britain Drinking Water. Drinking water 1990: A report by the Chief Inspector, Drinking Water Inspectorate. London: H.M.S.O., 1991.

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Maclure, Stuart. The inspector's calling: HMI and the shaping of educational policy 1945-1992. London: Hodder & Stoughton Educational, 2000.

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Patricia, Day. Inspecting the inspectorates: Services for the elderly. York: Joseph Rowntree Memorial Trust, 1990.

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Science, Department of Education &. School-based initial teacher training in England and Wales: A report by H M Inspectorate. London: H.M.S.O., 1991.

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9

Great Britain. Fire Services Inspectorate. North Wales Fire Service: A report of Her Majesty's Fire Service Inspectorate = Gwasanaeth Tân Gogledd Cymru : adroddiad Arolygwyr Gwasanaeth Tân Ei Mawrhydi. London: Home Office, 1997.

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Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Schools since 1944: Standard bearers or turbulent priests? London: Woburn Press, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Wages Inspectorate"

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Frank, Christopher. "The factory inspectorate, organized labour, and the debate over fines and deductions from wages, 1906–1914." In Workers, Unions and Payment in Kind, 224–87. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315651286-7.

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Marshall, Shelley. "Complementary or Functional Rival? Labour Regulation of Garment Industry Workers in Cambodia by Better Factories Cambodia." In Living Wage, 122–42. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198830351.003.0007.

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Chapter 7 explores the formalisation of the Cambodian garment industry and the factors that have shaped and constrained the effectiveness of the combination of the US–Cambodia Bilateral Textile Agreement and the International Labour Organization’s Better Factories Project. Unlike the Mathadi Boards examined in Chapter 4, a great deal has been written about efforts to improve working standards in the Cambodian garment industry. The Chapter makes two important interventions in the already abundant literature on Better Factories Cambodia. Firstly, it focuses on the role of the trade agreement that led to the establishment of Better Factories Cambodia, as preferential treatment in trade played a critical part in encouraging investment in formal enterprises. It argues that trade incentives were just as important as the BFC in improving the labour standards of participating enterprises. Secondly, it examines the initiative in the context of Cambodia’s political economy showing how the Hun Sen government has used the initiative to its advantage and avoided investing in its own labour inspectorate. For this reason, the chapter asks whether Better Factories Cambodia has become a functional rival to the state labour inspectorate.
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Barnard, Catherine, and Sarah Fraser Butlin. "Where Criminal Law Meets Labour Law." In Criminality at Work, 70–94. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198836995.003.0004.

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This chapter provides a detailed examination of the politics of criminalization in four key areas: the enforcement of working time rights by the Health and Safety Executive, the enforcement of National Minimum Wage entitlements by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC), the enforcement role of the Employment Agencies Standards Inspectorate, and the licensing regime administered by the Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority. It examines these diverse regimes through an enforcement lens. The Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority regime provides for a system of licensing for ‘gangmasters’ in specific sectors of economic activity. The Employment Agency Standards Inspectorate statutory framework specifies that a failure of employment agencies to comply with the certain specified standards itself constitutes a criminal offence. The National Minimum Wage framework provides for a composite mechanism of civil and criminal enforcement. Finally, the various working time limits in the Working Time Regulations are enforced through criminal offences.
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SAUNDERS, ANDREW. "Arnold Joseph Taylor 1911–2002." In Proceedings of the British Academy, 138 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, V. British Academy, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263938.003.0017.

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Arnold Taylor, or Joe as he was known to some, was a medieval scholar, archaeologist, and architectural historian, who spent his working career in the public service within the Ancient Monuments Inspectorate. An international expert on castles and, in particular, the authority on the North Wales castles of Edward I, he was not restricted in his interests in medieval buildings as a whole. Nor did Taylor study castles solely as monuments to medieval military architecture. He was fascinated by their construction, who designed and built them, where the materials and craftsmen came from, and how this side of the work was organised. As such, Taylor combined study of the standing remains with intensive documentary research. There were two other main strands to his professional life: his wider career in the Ancient Monuments Inspectorate, first in the Office of Works and ultimately in the Department of the Environment; and his service to the Society of Antiquaries of London.
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Tompsett, Hilary. "Social work education: learning from the past?" In Social Work, 77–96. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447356530.003.0006.

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The history of the regulation of the personal social services from 1970 onwards is described, contextualised and analysed. The various purposes and styles of inspection within regulatory systems are identified and discussed. The effects and contributions of competitive tendering of services, the Performance Assessment Framework, Joint Reviews, Best Value and Special Measures are noted. Adverse criticisms in the late 1980s of the Social Services Inspectorate, established in 1985, are contrasted with the high regard in which the Inspectorate was held by the late 1990s. The chapter then sets out the subsequent rapid changes to the regulatory structure in the years 2004-2010.The campaign for the registration of social workers, leading to the establishment in 2001 of the General Social Care Council, and its subsequent replacement first by the Health and Care Professions Council and then by Social Work England, is also discussed.The chapter compares unfavourably the experience in England, with its chronic institutional instability, with those of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which have been characterised by more constructive partnerships.
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Lloyd, Monica. "From Empirical Beginnings to Emerging Theory." In NATO Science for Peace and Security Series – E: Human and Societal Dynamics. IOS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/nhsdp210016.

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This chapter charts the author’s own learning pathway as a senior forensic psychologist working with those convicted of terrorist offences in the UK, from the Maze prison in Northern Ireland as a senior member of HM Inspectorate of Prisons during the period of the Good Friday Peace Agreement in 1998, through to casework in England & Wales with those convicted of terrorist offences between 2008 and 2011. These experiences created an ongoing research interest into the etiology of terrorist offending from a psychological perspective. Empirical work with convicted terrorist offenders over three years within a small team of psychologists informed a methodology for the assessment and management of the risk of terrorist re-offending for the British correctional system in 2012, and interventions to assist in their disengagement and/or desistance. This learning in turn informed the Prevent strand of the UK government’s counter-terrorism strategy for countering violent extremism in the community.2 More recently, as an academic this work has developed into a theorized typology of terrorists as more evidence has come to light about the contributions of criminality and individual psychopathology to terrorist violence. This chapter seeks to map this journey from empirical beginnings to emerging theory.
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