New Releases by Kevin H

Kevin H is the author of Trade Unions (1981), Charleston Navy Yard (1980), Unemployment (1979), A Handbook of Industrial Relations Practice (1979), The Brewing Industry (1979).

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Unemployment

Unemployment
As Britain''s ''unemployment problem'' persists, discussion and argument about it grow in fervour and complexity. But just who believe what? Who agrees with whom? What are facts and what mere opinions and prophesies? Above all, what is being done about the problem? In this Pelican Original, Kevin Hawkins provides an up-to-date briefing on these mysteries, surveying all the major theories and courses of action -current and proposed. Into a coherent context go the Philipps Curve, Bacon and Eltis, Lord Keynes and Professor Friedman, the ''welfare scroungers'' theory, the Manpower Services Commission, the balance of payment, the apprenticeship system and much else besides. There are many unemployment problems and no single solution; but, as the author shows, some -if not all-can be solved.

A Handbook of Industrial Relations Practice

The Brewing Industry

The Brewing Industry
Monograph on historical evolution, recent developments and trends in the brewery beverage industry in the UK - discusses mergers, tied public house system, domestic market structure, distribution network, production efficiency, profits, investment, oligopolistic competition, impact of government policies, social responsibility, licensing, policy options, etc. References and statistical tables.

Transit Authority Boards of Directors

British Industrial Relations, 1945-1975

Policy Statement on Tax-exempt Property and Institutional Growth

The Effectiveness of Vibrational Stress Relief in Carbon Steel Weldments

Report of the Boston Home Rule Commission to the Hon. Kevin H. White, Mayor of Boston

1970 Performance of Commercial Soybeans in Illinois

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the State Census of 1965, Statistics on Age Distribution by Sex in Cities and Towns of Massachusetts

New Jersey Attorney Ethics

New Jersey Attorney Ethics
The first definitive treatise in an ever-expanding area, New Jersey Attorney Ethics: The Law of New Jersey Lawyering collects, organizes and analyzes the New Jersey Rules of Professional Conduct, court rules, decisions of the New Jersey Supreme Court, the Superior Court, and District of New Jersey, opinions of the Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics, the Advertising and Unauthorized Practice Committees, and statutory authority governing attorney conduct in New Jersey. A dog-eared copy of this treatise should be on every New Jersey attorney’s desk. The treatise has been cited in opinions of the New Jersey Supreme Court, the Appellate Division, the Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics and the Disciplinary Review Board. New Jersey attorneys are governed by some of the strictest and most complex ethical principles in the nation. The New Jersey Rules of Professional Conduct varied significantly from those proposed by the ABA when they were first adopted by the New Jersey Supreme Court in 1984. In 2004, the Court substantially revised those rules even further. This volume provides a comprehensive, systematic analysis of the maze of New Jersey authorities that regulate an attorney''s conduct, including the literally thousands of opinions interpreting and applying the current and predecessor rules. Extensive discussions of:The N.J. Supreme Court''s authority over the profession.The limits of court authority and the roles of the other government branches.Organization of a law practice, including entity selection, firm names and letterhead.Advertising, marketing and solicitation.The legal fee agreement, including retainers and contingent fees.Fee sharingFee collection, including attorney liens, and fee arbitrationAttorney trust accountingDuties in representing a client, both in the transactional and litigation settingConflicts of interest, including imputed disqualification, screening, conflicts relating to concurrent clients, former clients, public representations, family relationships, the attorney’s own interests, and business transactions with a client.Client waivers of conflictsClient confidentialityDisclosure of client information to the courts and adversariesEx parte communicationDetailed analysis of New Jersey''s attorney discipline system, both procedurally and substantively.Immunity and confidentiality in the disciplinary system
91 - 106 of 106 results
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