The Industrial Relations Court of South Australia is a South Australian court empowered to adjudicate on rights and liabilities arising out of employment. It was originally established under the Industrial Arbitration Act 1912 and is continued in existence as a court of record by the Fair Work Act 1994 (formerly called the Industrial and Employee Relations Act 1994). The same Act also establishes the Industrial Relations Commission of South Australia.
Read more about Industrial Relations Court Of South Australia: Judiciary and Appointment, Jurisdiction of The Court
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“We agree fully that the mother and unborn child demand special consideration. But so does the soldier and the man maimed in industry. Industrial conditions that are suitable for a stalwart, young, unmarried woman are certainly not equally suitable to the pregnant woman or the mother of young children. Yet welfare laws apply to all women alike. Such blanket legislation is as absurd as fixing industrial conditions for men on a basis of their all being wounded soldiers would be.”
—National Womans Party, quoted in Everyone Was Brave. As, ch. 8, by William L. ONeill (1969)
“Think of the many different relations of form and content. E.g., the many pairs of trousers and whats in them.”
—Mason Cooley (b. 1927)
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—Eldridge Cleaver (b. 1935)
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—Fannie Lou Hamer (19171977)
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—Alex Atkinson, British humor writer. repr. In Present Laughter, ed. Alan Coren (1982)