Papers must draw on the importance role of Labour Union in South Korea, and ANALYZE IT FROM A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE, COMPARING TO ANOTHER COUNTRY OR OTHER COUNTRIES WHERE RELEVANT.
Sources. The paper is to involve an original library search and to be based primarily on academic journals and books, as follows:
1. Although this may vary depending on the chosen topic, students should make use of roughly five to ten reputable, reasonably current (e.g., last 5 to10 years), published academic sources. Do NOT rely on non-academic search engines (e.g., Google) for your sources.
2. You are discouraged from relying on non-academic sources, such as magazines, newspapers, practitioner periodicals (usually, these have articles of under 10 pages and/or do not contain references), general practitioner-oriented books, encyclopedias (including Wikipedia), or any sources of questionable objectivity (e.g., the Fraser Institute, the CIA web site).
3. Any non-academic sources should be attributable to a reputable institute, agency, or organization and must be properly referenced, so that they can be readily located on the net or elsewhere.
4. Unpublished papers, articles, or comments (e.g., from a web site or blog) should not be used.
Notes:
1) Papers must have good introductions, addressing what the paper is about, why this is of interest/importance, and how the paper is laid out (i.e., what is addressed and in what order). Introductions should be from half-a-page to a page-and-a-half.
2) Use sub-headings to guide the reader through the paper.
3) All material drawn directly from other sources must be cited. If this material is taken word-for-word, then it must be enclosed in quotations.
4) Papers should have a concluding section summarizing and discussing what you have found.
5) Make sure that you are not just describing each aspect in isolation from the other(s) — you need to actively compare, referring back and forth between South Korea and other countries.
6) Papers should have a concluding section summarizing and discussing what you have found.
Suggested Journal Sources: The following does not include all possible quality sources. However, student grades will be positively affected if they draw on articles from one or more of them.
British Journal of Industrial Relations (UK)
Industrial Relations Journal (UK)
Industrial and Labor Relations Review (U.S.)
Industrial Relations (U.S.)
International Journal of Human Resource Management (UK)
Human Resource Management Journal (UK)
Human Resource Management Review (US)
Asian Pacific Journal of Human Resources
European Journal of Industrial Relations (U.K.)
Socio-Economic Review
Work, Employment, and Society (U.K)
Economic and Industrial Democracy (Sweden)
Relations Industrielles (Canada)
Journal of Industrial Relations (Australia)
International Labour Review
Last Completed Projects
| topic title | academic level | Writer | delivered |
|---|
