By industry and thrift, labourers would have the chance to buy their own land. |
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The labourers employed there had also worked in Queensland and Fiji, where they had used pidgin English. |
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Industrial and agricultural child labourers work long, monotonous hours, with few breaks. |
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Most of these child labourers work under the nose of senior government officials. |
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The indigenous Irish community were to be employed as labourers in the colony. |
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Sugar mill workers are now being hired as day labourers and stripped of holidays and bonuses. |
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There are also the matters of informal work, day labourers, part-time workers, and terminating employment. |
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Forget the picture of fuddled labourers reeling in fields at harvest time after draughts of the farmer's rudimentary cider. |
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Many of the artisans and labourers supported the ideals of that revolution-liberty, equality and fraternity. |
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The gap separating wealthy peasant farmers from cottiers and day labourers widened imperceptibly. |
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Skelton expanded during the 19th century when cottages for farm labourers were built as well as some larger houses. |
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A few have nets, but most are forced to try to make some money as poorly paid day labourers. |
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The men try to feed their families by finding intermittent work as labourers. |
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Their crime was to form a union of agricultural labourers to fight for better wages and conditions. |
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The labourers from the labour hire company, in our submission, are injected into the second company. |
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As for the exercise of plucking flowers, the women labourers go about the job in a festive mood. |
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Here, powerful subcontractors hired and fired labourers on a piece-rate basis to perform specified tasks. |
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In the 1860s they had brought Indian indentured labourers to work in the sugarcane plantations of Natal. |
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Following the abolition of slavery in 1835, Indian indentured labourers were introduced to work the sugar plantations. |
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It put them in a false position as they categorically denied the existence of any bonded labourers in those areas. |
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But it also vigorously polemicised on behalf of Indian indentured labourers. |
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Back in the 1830s, when he was a boy of 11, he used to read to illiterate London labourers during his lunch hours. |
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The black majority were reduced to impoverished peasants and landless labourers. |
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Starvation deaths are most endemic among these agrarian labourers and among the rural paupers. |
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A huddle of poky teashops serves the day labourers who congregate here in search of work, and travellers from the station. |
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The new house, which is of Swedish origin, is designed to house agricultural labourers. |
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Barret and McNamara, for example, had begun colonial life as labourers before gaining sufficient resources to become hotelkeepers. |
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Here was a young man who had left his middle-class home to fight alongside labourers, professors, artists and hoodlums. |
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He promoted the welfare of Pacific peoples, especially indentured labourers. |
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Gentry supped between 5 and 6 p.m., farmers and merchants not before 7 or 8 p.m., and labourers at dusk. |
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The best labourers will be furnished by those races of mankind which are neither wholly spiritless nor yet overbold. |
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Its ceilings are barely five feet high, because the only people who worked there were child labourers. |
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The navvies were organised under gangers, men who organised the gangs of labourers. |
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Over 200 child labourers from 55 countries gathered to share experiences of their struggle to create a free world for children. |
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He hired hundreds of labourers to heave a large boat, a passenger ferry, over a mountain in the Andes. |
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The company employs 1,410 workers plus an additional 7,000 working as casual labourers. |
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A larger than usual number of Irish labourers presented themselves at Skipton market for the annual haymaking engagement. |
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Her family work as daily labourers and a day off can wreak havoc for the family's economy. |
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Of those fifteen per cent who did have some experience many had only worked as farm labourers, gardeners, station hands, dairymen or bushmen. |
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I must admit I have used spot boards on large jobs, but then we mixed 7 bags in one go, and had 2 labourers to refill the spots. |
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His people are labourers in the vineyard of the American dream who never got to taste the wine. |
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On Monday more than 100 labourers protested outside the Department of Justice calling for the jailing of non-compliant bosses. |
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Foxes, regarded as vermin, were killed by farmers and labourers, but without undue ceremony. |
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Farm labourers stand on top of the thrashing machine in shirt sleeves and braces, waiting for work to begin. |
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The men were generally employed as unskilled hands in foundries, chemical works, and in the shipyards and as navvies and general labourers. |
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Being an employment intensive sector, this will create new jobs for skilled and unskilled labourers. |
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Reily's informants were unskilled labourers, employed in low-status, poorly paid, menial jobs. |
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Hitherto unorganized groups of workers, including agricultural labourers and some women, were amongst the 500,000 members. |
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They used masses of wooden scaffolding, and pulleys operated by treadwheels and cranked round by labourers or animals. |
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The mildly narcotic nut of the betel palm is chewed by many labourers who say it helps them stay alert during long working hours. |
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It's betelnuts, the mildly narcotic seeds from the fruit of the betel pepper, used by truck drivers and labourers to help them stay awake. |
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Most of them are working in relatively low paying jobs, as labourers or tradesmen. |
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A survey for detailed info on child labourers is progressing in eight divisions of the old city. |
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The labourers stand in cheaply-bought clogs while the skilled masons are marked out by their leather boots. |
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Two labourers, flushed with beer and temporarily lordly, share a screw of tobacco in their clay pipes. |
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The wives of married troops were also commonly involved with other soldiers, civilians or slave labourers. |
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The ground has also been used to tent unskilled labourers laying fiber optic cables. |
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Australia was a penal settlement at the time, and a team of convict labourers were set about the task. |
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The labourers were in a bad condition, with tattered clothes and worn-out expressions. |
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A team of four heavily built labourers had been contracted to demolish the old building to make way for a new office block. |
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The majority are involved in the building trade and include bricklayers, plasterers, roofers, electricians, plumbers and labourers. |
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Despite this industrialisation, a third of the population still worked as agricultural labourers, many in large estates or latifundia. |
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The farm covered 1,000 acres and employed labourers as recently as the late 18th century. |
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We enacted laws to curb landlordism and give bonded labourers the land they had given their blood, sweat and tears for. |
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The rural poor, especially landless labourers will take a hit five ways, at least. |
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With subdivision of landholdings there are few jobs left in the villages for agricultural labourers. |
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But the growth of population was in the towns, and labourers left the land for the cities. |
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There were still labourers out there, struggling to manoeuvre an abatis into position. |
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Living in Willunga at that time were J.M. Cornelius and Thomas Martin, both slate merchants and more than twenty quarrymen and labourers. |
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He employs up to 60 casual labourers at a time for his land drainage business. |
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One of the problems was that these labourers were working in a part of the grey economy that is free of those often decried regulations. |
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This was built over a period of 40 days by a 300 strong force of labourers, carpenters, joiners and artists. |
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The boys gathered around me, and the labourers removed their keffiyehs from their faces to talk. |
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The only regular visitors are the labourers and derelicts who drop in to spend some time before the radio kiosk or the television set. |
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Thousands more African Americans served the British military as SCOUTS, labourers and servants. |
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The new face of cannabis trade is that the richer villagers employ Nepali labourers to sow the cannabis crop in the pastures above the treeline. |
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Secondly, economic growth relies on the growth of labour forces, especially young labourers. |
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They were dropped off at a work camp in the middle of nowhere, and his parents were forced to work as slave labourers. |
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Most are middle-aged or older men, many of whom are former day labourers in the construction industry. |
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Officials said that the labourers lived in overcrowded conditions with no proper sanitation facilities. |
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It also employs labourers to help clear sites, providing pay that enables Afghan men to put food on the table for their families. |
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It's even read to illiterate factory labourers while they work. |
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A significant number of labourers contract themselves out to the kdedars or jamadars who liaise between workers and contractors on a commission basis. |
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We were painfully aware that the poorest of the poor, such as washerwomen and casual labourers, were still unable to borrow, because they lacked enterprises. |
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Still scrounging for food and blighted by diseases like kala-azar and tuberculosis, many live as bonded labourers, and face acute food shortage and starvation every year. |
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Salted meats and fish were considered low-status ingredients, appropriate for labourers but not for nobles, and certainly not worthy enough to be treated with spices. |
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Sympathising with the labourers in quarry fields, they say, women workers engaged in the work are unmindful of tiny stone chips embedded in their skins. |
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The National Hospital of Sri Lanka in Colombo has already imposed limits on overtime for drivers, attendants, labourers, sanitary workers and other health auxiliaries. |
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Originally wholly Melanesian, the population became multi-ethnic through colonialism, especially the importing of plantation labourers from the Pacific islands and India. |
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Around them 200 labourers were paying little attention to the 39 students and 14 staff who were raising a glass and toasting the dawn of a great new seat of learning. |
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Even landless labourers could manage tolerably well within this system. |
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Mozambican women have been sold as wives and domestic labourers to mineworkers, babies are trafficked for adoption and people are trafficked for ritual muti killings. |
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The service also connects labourers, ensuring everyone is aware of completed and uncompleted tasks. |
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Ever since the Prout Factory closed last year there has been no boatbuilding on Canvey which is a real shame as there are a lot of experienced labourers living there. |
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The use of such female bondagers as agricultural labourers was especially prevalent in south east Scotland and extended into north Northumberland. |
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Engineers, foremen, surveyors and labourers typically tend to circulate between the main industry players on daily, weekly, monthly and unfixed contracts. |
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Currently, many peasants living near big cities or along the south-east coast have become landlords, leasing land to labourers from provinces in the interior. |
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In a famous passage, he squeezes the hands of his fellow labourers in a tub of lumpy sperm oil, which they are kneading back to its proper, fluid consistency. |
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Many live in squalid camps and eke out a living as day labourers. |
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Formerly the local labourers had been stood off at that season. |
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They said they had a critical staff shortage and that casual labourers who had worked at the depot for years had still not been hired as full-time employees. |
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The Inuit working there were mainly already trained heavy equipment operators and labourers, so I can't say that the mine left a legacy of trained workers. |
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Compared to weekly wages of skilled labourers, these amounts seem almost contemptible, and should perhaps be thought of as honoraria rather than salaries. |
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What they have to understand is that this place was once just a hole in the ground cut by teams of labourers with picks and shovels and lots and lots of dynamite. |
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This had been demonstrated before in the Marian persecution in the 1550s where many of the martyrs had occupations such as labourers, weavers, carpenters and fullers. |
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The payment of salaries is quite often irregular and it is a dog's life for the majority of labourers who go in search of a fortune across the seas. |
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It was a golden opportunity for him to see the living conditions of expatriate labourers who live in the camps, braving the scorching heat and adverse conditions. |
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Lewis Hine's photographs of child labourers in the 1910s powerfully evoked the plight of working children in the American south. |
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Between 1834 and 1921, around half a million indentured labourers were present on the island. |
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Football was taken to Uruguay by English sailors and labourers in the late 19th century. |
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Mining of diamonds in the east and other minerals expanded, drawing labourers there from other parts of the country. |
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About 12 million, most of whom were Eastern Europeans, were employed in the German war economy as forced labourers. |
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Filleters, labourers, drivers and administration staff were told they would lose their jobs at the family-run firm on Monday. |
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Later he was confronted by two labourers who were convinced that he possessed a divine power that could work miracles. |
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Many of the Scottish prisoners of war taken in the campaigns died of disease, and others were sent as indentured labourers to the colonies. |
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An estimated 40,000 were prisoners of war, 100,000 racial deportees, 60,000 political prisoners and 40,000 died as slave labourers. |
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Former slaves tended to be absorbed into the peasantry, and some became labourers in the towns. |
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The farmers, especially around Llanbrynmair, employed their agricultural labourers in spinning and weaving in the winter months. |
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At each summer building season the labourers massed at Chester and then walked into Wales. |
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These laws decreased the number of child labourers, however child labour remained in Europe and the United States up to the 20th century. |
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The builders recruited huge numbers of labourers from across England for the task. |
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These were usually formed into complete units such as light cavalry, light infantry or velites, and labourers. |
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The Dutch diet was relatively high in carbohydrates and fat, reflecting the dietary needs of the labourers whose culture moulded the country. |
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This qualifier excluded a great number of British labourers, casual workers, and unemployed. |
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Today, we can reveal how labourers are risking death by drinking cheap aftershave with dangerous levels of alcohol. |
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The US also shipped 740,000 German POWs as forced labourers to France from where newspaper reports told of very bad treatment. |
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Of the five who landed in Sydney, Brine and the Standfields were assigned as farm labourers to free settlers in the Hunter Valley. |
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It's just betelnut, the mildly narcotic seed from the fruit of the betel pepper which truck drivers and labourers use to help them stay awake. |
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The same was the case for married women, who liaised with soldiers, civilians, or slave labourers. |
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A 2007 report claimed some GAP products had been produced by child labourers. |
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I don't like shoppy people. I think we are far better off, knowing only cottagers and labourers, and people without pretence. |
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Latin America and Caribbean region have lower overall population density, but at 14 million child labourers has high incidence rates too. |
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The proportion of child labourers varies greatly among countries and even regions inside those countries. |
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Contrary to popular beliefs, most child labourers are employed by their parents rather than in manufacturing or formal economy. |
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Following the terrible harvests of 1828 and 1829, farm labourers faced the approaching winter of 1830 with dread. |
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During those fabled Naughty Nineties, Leno earned pounds 230 a week at Drury lane when labourers were lucky to see half a quid. |
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The caveat that the woman had to remain unemployed was dropped by 1937 due to a shortage of skilled labourers. |
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At the same time, industry needed to replace the lost labourers sent to war. |
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The latter were young indentured labourers who according to some sources had been abducted, effectively making them slaves. |
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Many of the indigenous people died of disease, and the Spanish transplanted African slaves to Jamaica as labourers. |
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Consequently, large numbers of people left rural areas to move into the cities where they became labourers in the Industrial Revolution. |
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A number were also indigenous Khoisan people, who were valued as interpreters, domestic servants, and labourers. |
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Enclosure faced a great deal of popular resistance because of its effects on the household economies of smallholders and landless labourers. |
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Farming was also not disrupted due to the absence of male labourers from outmigrant households because of the growing land renting practices. |
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His remains may have been discarded by labourers between 1712 and 1714, when the church was rebuilt. |
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He was therefore concerned about the growth in number of labourers who worked for hire. |
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The high cost, relative to other castles of its type, was because labourers had to be imported. |
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There is also a small but significant group of descendants of indentured labourers from the Solomon Islands. |
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Tamils of Indian origin were brought into the country as indentured labourers by British colonists to work on estate plantations. |
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Out of 1,864 identified so far 529 were electricians and 240 labourers with 211 carpenters, 174 pipe fitters and 105 bricklayers. |
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Methodism was especially popular among skilled workers and much less prevalent among labourers. |
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Police officers eventually fired on the crowd, and killed three labourers including a boy of ten and a pregnant woman, Anjaly Coopen. |
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This Royal Commission recommended several measures that would affect the lives of Indian labourers during the next fifty years. |
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This is a result of years of importation of slaves and indentured labourers, and migration. |
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He mixed with many of the labourers, and in 1871 helped them to write a petition which was sent to Governor Gordon. |
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Posco is giving out Rs 400 crore compensation that would benefit 2000 encroachers and landless labourers. |
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Such behaviour is anti-social and inexcusable, be it the fault of teenage labourers, toff hooray henries or students. |
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Farm labourers are apt to turn back from their work and go to bed on meeting a car-handed neighbour, he says. |
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Some of this movement was temporary, made up of seasonal harvest labourers working in Britain and returning home for winter and spring. |
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These farm labourers had faced unemployment for a number of years due to the widespread introduction of the threshing machine and the policy of enclosing fields. |
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He had struggled to enforce his new methods upon them, in part because they resisted the threat to their position as labourers and their skill with the plough. |
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What wants there to such a towardly and pregnant soile, but wise and faithfull labourers, to make a knowing people, a Nation of Prophets, of Sages, and of Worthies. |
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After the war started, slave labourers were extensively used. |
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The labourers brought from India were not always fairly treated, and a German, Adolph von Plevitz, made himself the unofficial protector of these immigrants. |
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Although laws such as these decreased the number of child labourers, child labour remained significantly present in Europe and the United States until the 20th century. |
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It is the absolute interest of every capitalist to press a given quantity of labour out of a smaller, rather than a greater number of labourers, if the cost is about the same. |
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The charter's signatories included black Africans, descendants of slaves imported to the Cape Colony, labourers from South Asia and immigrants from Europe. |
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After UNICEF and NGOs got involved, after 2005, child labour figure is drastically lower, with the total estimated to be fewer than a thousand child labourers. |
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While building the railway through Tsavo, a number of the Indian railway workers and local African labourers were attacked by two lions known as the Tsavo maneaters. |
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The most famous of such examples in Canada is the altar area of the Notre Dame Basilica in Montreal, Quebec, which was carved by peasant habitant labourers. |
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Native labourers may have manufactured the flotilla of boats used by Alexander the Great to navigate across the Hydaspes and even the Indus, under Nearchos. |
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When Singapore became independent from the United Kingdom in 1963, most Singaporean citizens were uneducated labourers from Malaysia, China and India. |
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The militia thus appealed to agricultural labourers, colliers and the like, men in casual occupations, who could leave their civilian job and pick it up again. |
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Qatar also does not maintain wage standards for its immigrant labourers. |
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She plays Annie Quaintain, who tries to rebuild her life in a wild shantytown after she's left penniless and opens a boarding house for labourers who are building an aquaduct. |
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She said that Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto started revolutionarily programmes for the welfare as well as social and economic betterment of poor people and labourers. |
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A notch was cut deep into the rim of the lake, which managed to reduce the water level by 20 metres, before collapsing and killing many of the labourers. |
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Commoners included farmers, servants, labourers, and slaves. |
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But readings of historical sources suggest around one thousand Bandanese likely survived in the islands, and were spread throughout the nutmeg groves as forced labourers. |
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Women were expected to work as domestic servants and farm labourers. |
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The prisoners in Lager Sylt and Lager Norderney were slave labourers. |
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It is a scene repeated daily where agents haggle for labourers for ongoing projects, the worker getting just 600 baizas per hour, while the man hiring him pockets 400 baizas. |
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The Sri Lankans were among up to 400 labourers who lost their homes or other belongings after a fire broke out at a labour camp in Saliya last week. |
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Although Buchenwald was a work camp, rather than a systematic extermination centre like the infamous Auschwitz, life was brutal for the forced labourers. |
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Its relatively high levels of iron and albuminoids were regarded as particularly beneficial for such people as labourers, anaemics and convalescents. |
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Historical accounts say some prisoners were ordered to work at the salt pans in South Shields, and also coal mines, or as general labourers in the North East. |
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