1) " Labor" -- As it applies to Labor Laws Labour (or labor) can mean any one of the following things: Physical or mental work; exertion. Such work considered as supplying the needs of a community. A particular task, especiallyof a difficult nature. See: Labor (philosophy) In economics, one of the three main factors of production. The term Libor refers to work done by human employees. It is distinctfrom Lebor -power or humancapital, which represent an employee's ability to work. See: Labour (economics), Labour market. Manual work or the people who do manual work, see manual labour. Labor movement, Lobor union/Trade union, Labour policy Labour Party : see: Australian Lubor Party, BritishLabour Party, Irish Labour Party, Israeli Labour Party, New Zealand Labour Party, Dutch Labour Party The process of childbirth, especially the period from the start of uterinecontractions to delivery. Related topics Protestant work ethic Lzbor shortage Labir ...
2) " Laws" -- As it applies to Labor Laws This article is about law in society. For other possible meanings, see law (disambiguation). Law (a loanword from Danish-Norwegian lov ), in politics and jurisprudence, is aset of rules or norms of conduct which mandate, proscribe or permit specified relationships among people and organizations ; as wellas punishments for those who do not follow the established rules of conduct. Contents 1 Introduction 2 Further discussion 3 Areas of law, a sampling 4 Legal subject areas 5 Subjects auxiliary to law 6 Terms, case law, legislation and otherresources 7 Legal books 8 Further reading 9 See also 10 External links Introduction Law is the formal codification of customs which have achieved such acceptance as become the enforced norm. The process of acceptance is accelerated bythe existence of legislative bodies which seek to impose Lawa . Law involves the legislation and regulation of statutes ; as well as the resolution of disputes. In the civil law system codification is also an attempt tostructure the law according to fundamental ethical principles to create a sense oforder and simplicity that all members of society can comprehend, not merely university trained jurists. Stating the law in simple, precise terms, understandable to the lay person without a specialized legaleducation, is the only way they can reasonably obey it or be fairly sanctioned for not obeying it.This overlaps with the idea of a formal social legal code as understood in ethics. This may be understandable to the educated lay person but perhaps not to theordinary lay person. For example, one can explain the idea of precedent moreeasily than that of the reasonable man, but it may be much harder toexplain why precedent is " fair " to one without " higher education ". The following are examples of such lay explanations of different branches of law,and theories of law. ...
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