Difference between revisions of "Right to work"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(removed "earn"; the point is not the earning but the having)
(made this into a disambiguation page; concept referred to by "right to work" is actually "right to employment")
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
<hide>
 
<hide>
[[page type::article]]
+
[[page type::disambiguation]]
[[thing type::memephrase]]
+
[[thing type::phrase]]
 
[[category:phrases]]
 
[[category:phrases]]
 
</hide>
 
</hide>
==About==
+
The meaning of "[[right to work]]" depends on context:
In the {{USA}}, the phrase "[[right to work]]" is most commonly the descriptive part of the phrase [[right to work law]], which is any law that prevents [[employer]]s from agreeing to require [[labor union]] involvement as a condition of employment.
+
* In most of the world, it refers to a [[social right]] to be [[employed]], i.e. the [[right to employment]], which is considered a basic [[human right]].
===Analysis===
+
* In the {{USA}}, it refers to [[right-to-work law]]s, which are laws that prevent [[employer]]s from agreeing to require [[labor union]] involvement as a condition of employment.
Taken at face value, the phrase "[[right to work]]" refers to the idea that employees should have the [[individual right]] to be [[employed]]. "Right to work laws" do not actually guarantee any such thing, so even at face value the phrase implies a falsehood.
 
 
 
As an argument for anti-union laws, the phrase is a form of [[interpretive framing]] in that it focuses on the possession of a ''[[employment|job]]'' as the goal, while ignoring the fact that unions generally have a positive effect on other significant factors such as [[working conditions]] and salary.
 
 
 
In effect, it presumes that a "[[right to employment]]" &ndash; something that many supporters of "right to work laws" are actually against, although internationally it is [[wikipedia:right to work|considered a basic human right]] &ndash; is somehow more important than a "right to a decent living", which is the primary reason for having a job and arguably something that should actually be a right.
 
 
 
==Usage==
 
* This page ([[right to work]]) is about the concept behind [[right to work law]]s in the {{USA}}.
 
* Internationally, the same phrase more commonly refers to a [[right of employment]].
 
==Links==
 
===Reference===
 
* Wikipedia: see [[wikipedia:Right-to-work law|Right-to-work law]]
 
* {{conservapedia}}
 
* {{!in|dkosopedia}}: no information as of 2012-12-08
 
* {{!in|sourcewatch}}: no information as of 2012-12-08
 

Latest revision as of 16:24, 19 April 2014

The meaning of "right to work" depends on context: