They organize in vain; they protest in vain; they appeal in vain.
2
Freedom means the right of people to assemble, organize, and debate openly.
3
We used qualitative content analysis to identify major themes and organize data.
4
Tomorrow she'd ask questions in the village and perhaps organize a search.
5
However, it might be wise not to organize a shopping-fest just yet.
1
Tens of thousands joined in protests she helped organise two weeks ago.
2
They can be difficult to organise with children present in the home.
3
Other opposition activists want to organise a general strike starting next week.
4
The government has contracted UK company Petrofac to organise the field's decommissioning.
5
Pagus Wine Tours in Verona organise daily tours to the wine regions.
1
Workers wanted to unionize, and fought for higher pay and safer working conditions.
2
Domestic workers, like all independent contractors, cannot unionize or bargain collectively.
3
They loathed the Wagner Act, which empowered workers to unionize and bargain collectively.
4
The proposed legislation, strongly opposed by business, would make it easier to unionize workplaces.
5
Nevertheless the Teamsters are still trying to unionize the stablehands, but without much progress.
Uso de unionise en inglés
1
It is increasingly tough to unionise a workforce, especially in a casualised workplace.
2
She pushed hard to regulate, unionise and improve safety, particularly in the forestry industry.
3
One basic right is for workers to unionise.
4
But dire conditions in the games industry had been driving developers to unionise long before coronavirus struck.
5
Imagine a sweatshop in Bangladesh, where the workers want to unionise, but are scuppered at every turn.
6
They are mainly female, are increasingly immigrants, often part time and difficult to unionise, so collective action is rare.
7
Staff representation also remains an issue, as the Independent's management have previously resisted attempts to unionise the digital operation.
8
An Apple store employee has started a drive to unionise retail workers in a rare move at the company.
9
They need to unionise.
10
It's a shame that staff were not able to unionise in my NGO and I don't see things changing soon.
11
Declan says coronavirus and the problems it has caused has left a lot more games workers feeling the need to unionise.
12
One of its first goals is to unionise Westpac Samoa's 75 workers as the bank undergoes transition to Bank South Pacific ownership.
13
If worker morale falls too low, they may make the radical decision to unionise, but there are also ways around this too.
14
Fyffes has its own code of practice which guarantees the right to unionise but this has yet to make a difference on the ground.
15
He has recently become more involved in helping other Deliveroo drivers to unionise after they went on strike in search of better pay and conditions.
16
She pushed hard to regulate, unionise and improve safety particularly in the forestry industry, while meeting and supporting the families of those injured and killed.