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South Africa Labour Bulletin
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Issue

The DTI Takes the Debate to Parliament

by Bezuidenhout, A

Public hearings were held from 23 April to 2 May 2002. The hearings were scheduled to discuss general views held …

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Categories In the Workplace, Vol 26 No 3 June 2002

The DTI’s Integrated Manufacturing Strategy: Is it all just Packaging

by Introduction

  Attachments Introduction. The dti's integrated manufacturing strategy. is it all just packaging_0 (201 kB)

Categories In the Workplace, Vol 26 No 3 June 2002

The DTI: Anything more than a call centre?

by SALB

Former DTI minister Alec Erwin has moved on to handling the effective operation of government’s state assets. But what legacy …

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Categories Vol 29 No 2 Apr/May 2005

The Duens Bakery Dispute

by C T Editors.

By Cape Town Editors  

Categories In the Workplace, Vol 2 No 9 & 10 1976

The Durban Bread Strike

by Badsha, O.

Documents: By Omar Badsha.  

Categories In the Workplace, Vol 11 No 4 1987

The Durban Communist Party, 1940s

by Edwards, I.

By Iain Edwards.  

Categories Vol 11 No 4 1987

The Durban Strikes 1973 (Institute for Industrial Education)

by Hyman, R.

By Richard Hyman  

Categories In the past, Vol 2 No 2 1976

The Earliest known Strikes by Black Workers

by Smalberg, J. and Gottschalk, K.

By John Smalberg and Keith Gottschalk  

Categories In the past, Vol 3 No 7 1977

The East London Strikes

by Mare, G.

By Gerry Mare  

Categories In the Workplace, Vol 1 No 5 1975

The Development of the Compound as a Mechanism of Worker Control 1900-1912

by Moroney, S.

By Sean Moroney.  

Categories In the past, Vol 4 No 3 1978
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The South African Labour Bulletin (SALB) mission is to:

  • * provide information and stimulate critical analysis and debate on issues and challenges that confront workers, their organisation and their communities; and
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In doing so the SALB hopes to advance the discourse of progressive politics, promote social justice and the interests of the working class.

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Funders

The South African Labour Bulletin appreciates the support of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung and Department of Labour. The Open Society foundation funded parts of the preparatory work for the website.

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