laborPolicy
P30090
predicate
Indicates a relationship where an authority or organization defines, regulates, or enforces rules and standards governing labor conditions, rights, and practices.
All labels observed (3)
| Label | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| laborPolicy canonical | 10 |
| laborProtection | 2 |
| laborMarketPolicy | 1 |
Description generation (PDg)
The one-sentence description above was generated by prompting gpt-5.1 with the predicate name and this instruction.
Instruction
Given a predicate that represents a relationship or action between entities, generate a one-sentence description explaining its meaning. # Instructions Focus on describing the relationship, not the entities themselves. # Response Format Begin the description with \' Indicates...\'
Input
Predicate: laborPolicy
Generated description
Indicates a relationship where an authority or organization defines, regulates, or enforces rules and standards governing labor conditions, rights, and practices.
Sample triples (13)
| Subject | Object |
|---|---|
| United States home front during World War II | no-strike pledges by major unions ⓘ |
| United States home front during World War II | creation of Fair Employment Practice Committee ⓘ |
| Reagan administration | firing of striking PATCO air traffic controllers ⓘ |
| Adamson Act | limits standard workday to eight hours for covered workers via predicate surface "laborProtection" ⓘ |
| Adamson Act | requires additional pay for overtime work via predicate surface "laborProtection" ⓘ |
| Boston Associates | employed young women from New England farms ⓘ |
| Boston Associates | used company boardinghouses for workers ⓘ |
| Boston Associates | imposed moral and behavioral codes on workers ⓘ |
| Cleveland administration | federal intervention in the Pullman Strike ⓘ |
| Jospin Government | reduction of standard workweek to 35 hours via predicate surface "laborMarketPolicy" ⓘ |
| Second Republic (Portugal) | ban on free trade unions ⓘ |
| Second Republic (Portugal) | corporatist syndicates ⓘ |
| Auburn system | use of inmate labor for prison industries ⓘ |