Chap., §
1 1, 1| for millions of skilled workers these changes may perhaps
2 2, 5| responsibility, when it deprives many workers of their previous employment,
3 2, 7| circumstances, of the activity of workers' associations and public
4 2, 8| burst of solidarity between workers, first and foremost industrial
5 2, 8| and foremost industrial workers. The call to solidarity
6 2, 8| action addressed to the workers - especially to those engaged
7 2, 8| that weighed heavily upon workers in that period of rapid
8 2, 8| attention to the rights of the workers, on the grounds that human
9 2, 8| realization by others of workers' rights, has in many cases
10 2, 8| systems have been thought out. Workers can often share in running
11 2, 8| stimulated unity between workers for particular solidarity
12 2, 8| movements of solidarity of the workers and with the workers. This
13 2, 8| the workers and with the workers. This solidarity must be
14 2, 8| by exploitation of the workers, and by the growing areas
15 2, 9| not only to agricultural workers, who spend long days working
16 2, 9| and quarries, to steel - workers at their blast - furnaces,
17 2, 9| children. It is familiar to all workers and, since work is a universal
18 3, 11| originated in the fact that the workers put their powers at the
19 3, 11| living conditions of the workers and their families. ~This
20 3, 14| the present generation of workers is working day after day.
21 3, 14| of work, sharing by the workers in the management and/or
22 3, 15| certain specific rights of workers, corresponding to the obligation
23 4 | IV. RIGHTS OF WORKERS~
24 4, 17| objective requirements of the workers, especially if he himself
25 4, 18| we consider the rights of workers in relation to the "indirect
26 4, 18| subsistence of unemployed workers and their families, is a
27 4, 18| the living standard of the workers in the different societies
28 4, 19| providing employment for all workers plays in safeguarding respect
29 4, 19| ensure the life and health of workers and their families play
30 4, 19| be easily available for workers, and that as far as possible
31 4, 19| which are not harmful to the workers' physical health or to their
32 4, 20| together with the need for the workers themselves to secure them,
33 4, 20| The vital interests of the workers are to a certain extent
34 4, 20| from the struggle of the workers - workers in general but
35 4, 20| struggle of the workers - workers in general but especially
36 4, 20| especially the industrial workers - to protect their just
37 4, 20| existential interests of workers in all sectors in which
38 4, 20| mean that only industrial workers can set up associations
39 4, 20| are unions of agricultural workers and of white-collar workers;
40 4, 20| workers and of white-collar workers; there are also employers'
41 4, 20| to secure the rights of workers who are united by the same
42 4, 20| secure the just rights of workers within the £ramework of
43 4, 20| protection of the just rights of workers according to their individual
44 4, 20| instruct and educate the workers and to foster their selfeducation.
45 4, 20| schools, what are known as workers' or people's universities
46 4, 20| the work of their unions, workers will not only have more,
47 4, 20| limits. In this connection workers should be assured the right
48 4, 21| position of agricultural workers differs from country to
49 4, 21| just rights of agricultural workers and, finally, on the level
50 4, 21| protection for the agricultural workers themselves and for their
51 4, 21| infringed when the farm workers are denied the possibility
52 4, 22| disabled people - as for all workers - to their just remuneration,
53 4, 23| regard to the rights of workers. It is obvious that the
54 4, 23| comparison with the other workers in that society in the matter
55 4, 23| be applied to immigrant workers as to all other workers
56 4, 23| workers as to all other workers in the society concerned.
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