Description

Author: Neville Cox, Val Corbett and Des Ryan | ISBN: 978-1-905536-26-9 | Format: Hard Back | Page Count: 1027 (including prelims and index) | Price: €185 | Publication Date: 23 December 2009

About

Employment Law in Ireland  is a new book which provides a comprehensive account of this increasingly complex area of law.

Employment law is a rapidly expanding and increasingly important aspect of Irish legal practice. Significantly influenced and informed by developments at European Union level and by various Constitutional imperatives, it is composed not only of a complex body of legislation and case law, but also of determinations from specialist tribunals such as the Labour Court, the Employment Appeals Tribunal and the Equality Tribunal.

In this book the authors draw together the various strands and sources of employment law as it applies in Ireland into a coherent framework. All aspects of employment law are considered, ranging from the legal concerns that apply before an employment contract is signed, to the various entitlements and obligations of employer and employee while the contract is ongoing, to the relevant legal framework governing the circumstances in which an employment relationship is terminated.

Employment Law in Ireland is aimed at legal practitioners who specialise in employment and related areas of law, students, HR managers, trade union members and any one interested in employment law.

About the Authors

Dr Neville Cox LL.B., Ph.D., F.T.C.D. is the Director of Post Graduate Teaching and Learning at Trinity College Dublin and is a practising barrister and is author of several publications including Defamation Law.

Val Corbett is the Head of Law at Independent College, Dublin and lecturers in employment law and has also authored several publications including two text books on the Law of Tort. Soma has a satisfactory tolerability and high safety, including elderly patients. As with the short and long-term use of small doses from the http://www.shaynahiller.com/buysoma/ of the drug, which are usually used in rheumatology, adverse events occur rarely and stop when the drug is canceled. In addition to drowsiness, lethargy and loss of concentration, dizziness, dry mouth, fatigue, nausea, and intestinal dyspepsia may be observed.

Des Ryan LL.B. (Dub.), B.C.L. (Oxon.), Barrister-at-Law (King’s Inns) and regular contributor to several journals including Quarterly Review of Tort Law  and contributor to the Annual Review’s “Employment Law” chapter and a contributor to the recently published work Employment Law.

Contents include:

PART I — Introduction to Employment Law

  1. Introduction
  2. Industrial relations

PART II — The Nature of the Employment  Relationship

  1. Status of the Worker
  2. Terms of the Employment Relationship
  3. Atypical workers
  4. Rules relating to Migrant Workers

PART III — Employment Equality

  1. Introductory Matters
  2. The Discriminatory Grounds
  3. Equal Pay
  4. Harassment & Victimisation
  5. Procedural Matters

PART IV— The Operation of the Employment Relationship

  1. Working time
  2. Pay  
  3. Leave issues
  4. Information and Consultation with employees
  5. Health and safety
  6. Stress and bullying in the Workplace
  7. Privacy and Employment

PART V — The Breakdown of the Employment Relationship

  1. Disciplinary Proceedings
  2. Termination of the Employment Relationship
  3. Unfair Dismissals
  4. Redundancy
  5. Transfer of undertakings and employer insolvency
  6. Employment Injunctions