The Great Depression of 1929 was the worst economic crisis in US history, affecting the entire industrialized world. It began in 1929 and lasted around 10 years. Many factors contributed to this financial disaster, but the main cause was overproduction and limited credit, which led to Black Thursday. As a result, American exports slowed down, world trade dropped, and the US sought to repatriate capital invested in other countries.
The Cold War was a state of political and economic tension between the United States and the Soviet Union where both sides wanted to prevail over the other. It involved opposing economic systems like capitalism, where private individuals own capital goods, and communism, where the means of production are owned collectively. The Marshall Plan was an American program that allocated over $12 billion for the reconstruction of Europe after World War II. Ultimately, the Cold War had a winner, the USA, and a loser, the USSR.
The Vietnam War lasted from 1954 to 1975 between North Vietnam and South Vietnam. The United States became involved to stop the spread of communism in Southeast Asia. Despite superior firepower, the U.S. was unable to defeat the Viet Cong guerilla forces hiding in the jungle. Direct U.S. military involvement ended in 1973 with a cease-fire agreement, but the war concluded in 1975 with a North Vietnamese victory. Over 55,000 American soldiers died during the conflict.
Women have a history of voting in the United States that stretches back to the early republic, as some states allowed women to vote and New Jersey was the first to recognize women's right to vote in its constitution and laws. In the late 1800s, women pursued three strategies to secure the right to vote nationwide: seeking a broader interpretation of the 14th Amendment, changing individual state laws, and passing a constitutional amendment to override state laws prohibiting women from voting. It took several decades of activism and the 19th Amendment in 1920, but women were finally guaranteed the right to vote across the United States.
The document summarizes the key events of the Boston Tea Party in 1773 and its aftermath. It describes how colonists in Boston boarded British ships and dumped 342 containers of tea into the harbor in protest of new taxes imposed by the British government. In response, the British punished the entire town of Boston by blockading the harbor and sending army regiments to enforce the closure, which increased tensions leading up to the American Revolution.
Rosa Parks was arrested in 1955 for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger on a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama. She was tired of giving in to the rule that required black people to give up their seats for white people. After her arrest, Parks became an icon of the Civil Rights Movement but faced hardship as she lost her job and her husband was forced to quit his job for supporting her case. She spent over a year in jail for her act of defiance that helped spark the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
The document discusses the history of transportation in the 1800s and early 1900s. It describes the first steam locomotive railway in 1804 in Wales. It then discusses the authorization of a transcontinental railroad in the US in 1853 to connect the east and west coasts. Two private companies, Union Pacific and Central Pacific, were formed to build the railroad and were given land grants and loans to finance construction. The railroad was completed in 1869, connecting Omaha, Nebraska to Sacramento, California. The document also briefly summarizes Prohibition in the US from 1920 to 1933, when the 18th Amendment banned alcohol but was later repealed by the 21st Amendment in 1933.
The Great Depression of 1929 was the worst economic crisis in US history, affecting the entire industrialized world. It began in 1929 and lasted around 10 years. Many factors contributed to this financial disaster, but the main cause was overproduction and limited credit, which led to Black Thursday. As a result, American exports slowed down, world trade dropped, and the US sought to repatriate capital invested in other countries.
The Cold War was a state of political and economic tension between the United States and the Soviet Union where both sides wanted to prevail over the other. It involved opposing economic systems like capitalism, where private individuals own capital goods, and communism, where the means of production are owned collectively. The Marshall Plan was an American program that allocated over $12 billion for the reconstruction of Europe after World War II. Ultimately, the Cold War had a winner, the USA, and a loser, the USSR.
The Vietnam War lasted from 1954 to 1975 between North Vietnam and South Vietnam. The United States became involved to stop the spread of communism in Southeast Asia. Despite superior firepower, the U.S. was unable to defeat the Viet Cong guerilla forces hiding in the jungle. Direct U.S. military involvement ended in 1973 with a cease-fire agreement, but the war concluded in 1975 with a North Vietnamese victory. Over 55,000 American soldiers died during the conflict.
Women have a history of voting in the United States that stretches back to the early republic, as some states allowed women to vote and New Jersey was the first to recognize women's right to vote in its constitution and laws. In the late 1800s, women pursued three strategies to secure the right to vote nationwide: seeking a broader interpretation of the 14th Amendment, changing individual state laws, and passing a constitutional amendment to override state laws prohibiting women from voting. It took several decades of activism and the 19th Amendment in 1920, but women were finally guaranteed the right to vote across the United States.
The document summarizes the key events of the Boston Tea Party in 1773 and its aftermath. It describes how colonists in Boston boarded British ships and dumped 342 containers of tea into the harbor in protest of new taxes imposed by the British government. In response, the British punished the entire town of Boston by blockading the harbor and sending army regiments to enforce the closure, which increased tensions leading up to the American Revolution.
Rosa Parks was arrested in 1955 for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger on a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama. She was tired of giving in to the rule that required black people to give up their seats for white people. After her arrest, Parks became an icon of the Civil Rights Movement but faced hardship as she lost her job and her husband was forced to quit his job for supporting her case. She spent over a year in jail for her act of defiance that helped spark the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
The document discusses the history of transportation in the 1800s and early 1900s. It describes the first steam locomotive railway in 1804 in Wales. It then discusses the authorization of a transcontinental railroad in the US in 1853 to connect the east and west coasts. Two private companies, Union Pacific and Central Pacific, were formed to build the railroad and were given land grants and loans to finance construction. The railroad was completed in 1869, connecting Omaha, Nebraska to Sacramento, California. The document also briefly summarizes Prohibition in the US from 1920 to 1933, when the 18th Amendment banned alcohol but was later repealed by the 21st Amendment in 1933.
2. LE CAUSE PRINCIPALI
Dimissione del
dipendente
Morte del
lavoratore
Pensionamento
Licenziamento
individuale
Cessazione dell’attivitá
aziendale
Scadenza del contratto a
temo determinato
Licenziamnti
collettivi
4. IL
PREAVVISO
Il preavviso é il periodo tra la
comunicazione della dimissione o
del licenziamento ed il momento in
cui lo stesso verrá effettuato.
Il preavviso deve avere una
determinata durata, che é stabilita
dal contratto.
8. È possibile solo per giusta causa.
Il licenziamento si dice nullo quando é
discriminatorio. Il lavoratore illegittimamente
licenziato ha diritto ad essere riassunto a al
risarcimento del danno subito.
Il licenziamnto si dice inefficace quando
questo è stato effettuato senza rispettare le
procedure.
IL LICENZIAMENTO
INDIVIDUALE
9. Sono effettuati da aziende con più di 15
dipendenti, e che comportano il
licenziamento di più di 5 persone
nell’arco di 120 giorni.
Sono previste particolari procedure, e
bisogna versare una determinata somma
di denaro all’INPS per ogni lavoratore
licenziato
I LICENZIAMENTI
COLLETTIVI
10. OBBLIGAZIONI
SUCCESSIVE ALLA
CESSAZIONE DEL
CONTRATTO
effettuare il conguaglio di fine rapporto
registrare sul libro unico le competenze di
fine rapporto
comunicare al Centro per l’impiego la
cessazione del rapporto di lavoro (entro 5
giorni)
Una volta cessato il contratto il datore di
lavoro deve:
11. COMPENSI DI
FINE RAPPORTO
Alla conclusione del rapporto di
lavoro, il datore di lavoro deve
obbligatoriamente corrispondere
al lavoratore il TFR ed
eventualmente l’indennità
sostitutiva al mancato preavviso.
12. Grazie per la vostra
attenzione
Presentazione creata da Piva Serena 3SD
A.F.G.P BONSIGNORI 2019/2020