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Diensbeëindiging as deel van die uitsluiting in die Suid-Afrikaanse regPotgieter, Hendrik Josephus 01 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Summaries in English and Afrikaans / The statutory definition of the lock-out encompasses
certain acts (inter alia termination of contracts of
employment) which must be executed by the employer
with a certain purpose.
The Appellate Division has recently found that the
employment relationship not necessarily terminates
similarly to the common law contract of employment,
but may subsist after termination of the contract of
employment.
The industrial court does not easily accept that it
has been deprived of its unfair labour practice
jurisdiction where terminations of employment take
place in consequence of a lock-out. The motive of the
employer seems to be decisive.
In line with both the trend in first world countries
and principles established by the courts in South
Africa, the Constitution and especially recent labour
legislation significantly curtail the bargaining power
of the employer because it is progressively being
believed that the employer has sufficient economic
power to his disposal. / Die omskrywing van die uitsluiting in wetgewing omvat
sekere handelinge {onder andere beeindiging van dienskontrakte)
wat deur die werkgewer met 'n sekere doel
verrig moet word.
Die Appelhof het onlangs beslis dat die diensverhouding
na beeindiging van die dienskontrak kan bly
voortduur en nie noodwendig soos die gemeenregtelike
dienskontrak ten einde loop nie.
Die nywerheidshof aanvaar ook nie geredelik dat hy in
geval van diensbeeindiging wat volg op 'n uitsluiting
van sy onbillike arbeidspraktyk jurisdiksie ontneem is
nie. Die motief van die werkgewer blyk hier deurslaggewend
te wees.
In lyn met sowel die ne1g1ng in eerstew~reldse lande,
asook beginsels reeds deur die howe in Suid-Afrika
gevestig, word die bedingingsmag van die werkgewer
ingevolge die Grondwet en veral onlangse arbeidswetgewing
betekenisvol ingekort omrede toenemend aanvaar
word dat die werkgewer oor voldoende ekonomiese mag
beskik. / Law / LL.M.
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The termination of the employment relationship on the grounds of the employee's HIV statusKone, Mmberegeni Kingshald 11 1900 (has links)
A substantial number of employees in South Africa may soon be out of work as the result of their HIV-positive status. The dismissal of an infected employee may be motivated by the fact that he is considered to be incompetent or incapable of doing the work for which he was employed. Customers and fellow employees may refuse to deal with an infected employee, with the result that the employee is dismissed for economic reasons. The nature of the undertaking's
activities may be such that the presence of an infected employee constitutes a health risk. For the purposes of carrying out his duty to create and maintain safe working conditions, the employer dismisses the employee. The employer may even force the infected employee to resign.
Measures should be taken to improve the situation of infected employees. They include educating employers and employees about the transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus. / Mercentile Law / LL. M.
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Diensbeëindiging as deel van die uitsluiting in die Suid-Afrikaanse regPotgieter, Hendrik Josephus 01 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Summaries in English and Afrikaans / The statutory definition of the lock-out encompasses
certain acts (inter alia termination of contracts of
employment) which must be executed by the employer
with a certain purpose.
The Appellate Division has recently found that the
employment relationship not necessarily terminates
similarly to the common law contract of employment,
but may subsist after termination of the contract of
employment.
The industrial court does not easily accept that it
has been deprived of its unfair labour practice
jurisdiction where terminations of employment take
place in consequence of a lock-out. The motive of the
employer seems to be decisive.
In line with both the trend in first world countries
and principles established by the courts in South
Africa, the Constitution and especially recent labour
legislation significantly curtail the bargaining power
of the employer because it is progressively being
believed that the employer has sufficient economic
power to his disposal. / Die omskrywing van die uitsluiting in wetgewing omvat
sekere handelinge {onder andere beeindiging van dienskontrakte)
wat deur die werkgewer met 'n sekere doel
verrig moet word.
Die Appelhof het onlangs beslis dat die diensverhouding
na beeindiging van die dienskontrak kan bly
voortduur en nie noodwendig soos die gemeenregtelike
dienskontrak ten einde loop nie.
Die nywerheidshof aanvaar ook nie geredelik dat hy in
geval van diensbeeindiging wat volg op 'n uitsluiting
van sy onbillike arbeidspraktyk jurisdiksie ontneem is
nie. Die motief van die werkgewer blyk hier deurslaggewend
te wees.
In lyn met sowel die ne1g1ng in eerstew~reldse lande,
asook beginsels reeds deur die howe in Suid-Afrika
gevestig, word die bedingingsmag van die werkgewer
ingevolge die Grondwet en veral onlangse arbeidswetgewing
betekenisvol ingekort omrede toenemend aanvaar
word dat die werkgewer oor voldoende ekonomiese mag
beskik. / Law / LL.M.
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The termination of the employment relationship on the grounds of the employee's HIV statusKone, Mmberegeni Kingshald 11 1900 (has links)
A substantial number of employees in South Africa may soon be out of work as the result of their HIV-positive status. The dismissal of an infected employee may be motivated by the fact that he is considered to be incompetent or incapable of doing the work for which he was employed. Customers and fellow employees may refuse to deal with an infected employee, with the result that the employee is dismissed for economic reasons. The nature of the undertaking's
activities may be such that the presence of an infected employee constitutes a health risk. For the purposes of carrying out his duty to create and maintain safe working conditions, the employer dismisses the employee. The employer may even force the infected employee to resign.
Measures should be taken to improve the situation of infected employees. They include educating employers and employees about the transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus. / Mercentile Law / LL. M.
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A critical evaluation of the protection of the rights of employees living with HIV/AIDS in the South African workplaceMolongoana, Henry Sifiso 01 1900 (has links)
People living with HIV/AIDS have the right to be employed as long as they are physically fit to do the work. The unfortunate situation now is that in many South African workplaces employees who disclose their HIV/AIDS status or who are suspected of living with the disease face backlashes from fellow employees and sometimes even from employers. No one should be discriminated against or be prevented from being employed or dismissed from employment purely on the basis of having HIV or AIDS. Any form of discrimination against employees living with HIV/AIDS constitutes a violation of their constitutional rights to among others human dignity, equality and fair labour practices. Discrimination may take the form of pre-employment HIV testing or a dismissal due to HIV positive status.
This research looks at the protection given to employees living with HIV/AIDS in the South African workplaces and whether the protection is adequate or not. / Mercantile Law / LL. M.
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The constitutionality of employers' investigative procedures and disciplinary hearing processes with specific reference to dismissal of employees on the basis of criminal misconducts in South AfricaMonyakane, ’Mampolokeng ’Mathuso Mary-Elizabeth 22 October 2020 (has links)
This Doctoral thesis entitled the Constitutionality of Employers' Investigative Procedures and Disciplinary Hearing Processes with Specific Reference to Dismissal of Employees on the Basis of Criminal Misconducts in South Africa, focusses on individual labour law principles of fair labour practices entrenched in section 23(1) of the Constitution. The thesis deals with fairness in situation where an employee who is suspected of committing a criminal act is investigated and subsequently goes through a disciplinary hearing for dismissal. It determines the extent to which an employee’s criminal guilt is decided before dismissal. As such, the thesis is based upon South African judicial interpretation of the right to fair dismissal. In the process the thesis examines the application of principles informing the employer’s duty to provide fair reason concerning the dismissal of employees criminal suspects. In examining if employers observe constitutional transformative objective when conducting criminal investigations and disciplinary hearings - the thesis reviews the extent to which the employer respects constitutional rationales of equity based on the principles of natural justice. These natural justice principles are the basis upon which section 23(1) fairness is founded. Section 23 (1) is implemented through the LRA provisions. The thesis then concludes that, only one principle of natural justice - audi alteram partem is respected within employer flexibility-based fairness while the other principle - nemo judex in propria sua causa is ignored. It is this denial that causes serious procedural challenges in the quest for equity intended in section 23(1) fair labour practices. It is upon these foundational equity concerns that this thesis opposes the flexibility in employer’s criminal investigations and disciplinary hearing processes entrenched in item 4 (1) of Schedule 8 of the LRA fair procedure for dismissal of employees suspected of criminal acts. The thesis interlinks labour law and criminal law to advocate for the missing constitutionally justiciable fairness for employees who have committed criminal misconducts. It argues that the current judicial interpretation of labour law fairness is based upon the principle of flexibility underlying dismissals, asserting that fairness based on flexibility breeds informal procedural processes which exempt employers from observing crucial constitutional fairness principles expressed through proportionality-based prescripts. The thesis concludes that the practice of including the right against self-incrimination in employment law, done in other common law countries be introduced into the South African labour law through section 39 of the Constitution so that the identified procedural challenges are regulated. / Mercantile Law / LL.D.
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