Example sentences of "change in [art] labour [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A number of the gains made by the unions are the direct result of changes in the labour legislation ; for example , as noted above , the regular working week was reduced in stages from 48 hours to 40 hours .
2 Changes in the labour force accounted for 1.53 per cent and 1.57 per cent respectively .
3 One of the most significant changes in the labour market in the twentieth century is the rising proportion of the labour force made up of married women returning to work after completing their families .
4 Working backwards from the labour market , first of all there are changes in the labour market itself .
5 In addition to these changes in the labour market , and the possibilities of substitution within it , the curriculum-employment nexus is complicated by a third set of factors related to the selection of graduates .
6 This finding is significant in itself , but it becomes even more so when matched against the changes in the labour market already described , where part-time working is increasingly important , and not only for women .
7 Secondly , changes in the labour market and the increased participation of women in employment has raised questions about the extent to which lone mothers — like more and more married mothers — should be expected to take paid employment ( Brown , 1989 ) .
8 The Minister misses one essential point about the changes in the labour market .
9 The investigation analyses the responses of households to these changes in the labour market , through research in a North-West town .
10 The authors claim the increase must be seen against a background of changes in the labour market , making equality of pay , opportunity and status more difficult .
11 A cursory look at the experience of late capitalist economies across the world suggests that changes in the labour process are closely linked to highly demarcated differentiations in the labour force ; socially constructed identities that describe the division of labour , differential incorporation into the economy tied to cultural ( ideological ) constructions of gender , skill , age and race .
12 Within production , computerization has produced ‘ automatic production control ’ in integrated and self-monitoring plant and machinery which has required changes in the labour process .
13 The regulationist school , however , sees the structural changes that are associated with the changes in ‘ hardware ’ ( the computerization ) as broader than changes in the labour process .
14 The long-wave school tends to conduct analysis in terms of sectors , whilst the regulationists would focus on changes in the labour process which , while undoubtedly being associated with the growth of new sectors , may also transform existing ones .
15 Wolpe 's argument is that changes in the labour process have resulted in a disjunction between the skills taught by the education system and the skills ( or , in a sense , lack of skills ) demanded in the labour market .
16 But there is no doubt that most were working differently , and that changes in the labour process were part and parcel of the explosion in productive potential .
17 Leaving the ERM is going to involve the loss of international comparisons with related worker groups in Europe , but any benefits that may have been retained through an attitudinal change in the labour market will not become clear until they are tested in the course of an economic upturn .
18 While for some this is a welcome development , for many others this structural change in the labour market reduces the income and the company welfare benefits of those concerned to such an extent that they are made inferior to their colleagues in the primary labour market .
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