Word: workersã
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...Coca-Cola ceded to protesters’ demands and spent more on workers?? factory conditions and environmental disposals, the prices of its product would necessarily go up. If their customers are not willing to pay these increased prices and stop buying the products, Coca-Cola will produce less, causing its workers to lose their jobs. Thus, the boycott will have harmed the very people it aimed to help...
Meanwhile, scandals over Harvard’s treatment of its workers??such as protests that forced the University to rehire a janitor fired for fainting due to a medical condition—have drawn attention to easily-overlooked problems—and people—within our community. Harvard’s next president needs to keep an eye on our reputation outside the academic world...
...their children suffered, while 65 percent of men reported the same detriment. But for some, high salaries are not the only reason to choose these high-pressure jobs, according to the study. Only 43 percent of men and 28 percent of women who qualify as “extreme workers?? listed high financial compensation as a motivation for their work. Far more—90 percent of men and 82 percent of women—said their motivation comes from the adrenaline rush that such work provides...
Although Faculty of Arts and Sciences spokesman Robert Mitchell, in a brief phone interview yesterday, said he had no new information on the inquiry into the animal cage-cleaning workers?? allegations, forum organizers say their concerns aren’t allayed...
Speakers at the forum—including Bliss Professor of Latin American History and Economics John Womack Jr., two union representatives, and the workers??sought to turn the audience’s attention toward “institutional racism,” rather than just focusing on individual layoffs...