Pitch Engine
Times Advertising


.

Qantas fights on against court ruling it unlawfully sacked 2,000 workers

  • Written by Anthony Forsyth, Professor of Workplace Law, RMIT University
Qantas fights on against court ruling it unlawfully sacked 2,000 workersShutterstock

Qantas has tugged at many Australians’ heart strings with its advertising campaign about reuniting family and friends. It dangles the prospect of travelling overseas, and of thousands of Australians still stranded overseas coming home.

But the airline is fighting hard to not bring back thousands of jobs it unlawfully outsourced...

Read more: Qantas fights on against court ruling it unlawfully sacked 2,000 workers

More Articles ...

  1. It's time for Australia to develop its own guided missiles — otherwise, we'll need to keep asking for the codes
  2. Neurodiversity can be a workplace strength, if we make room for it
  3. From October, it will be all but impossible for most Australians to vape — largely because of Canberra's little-known 'homework police'
  4. Of Australia's 32 biggest infrastructure projects, just eight had a public business case
  5. Young Australian women in financial hardship are twice to three times as likely to experience violence
  6. Climate change means Australia may have to abandon much of its farming
  7. Introducing OzSAGE, a source of practical expert advice for how to reopen Australia from COVID safely
  8. OnlyFans controversy highlights the bind facing most gig workers
  9. How 'tax forgiveness' could help New Zealand's many small businesses weather the financial woes brought on by COVID-19
  10. Do vaccination passports take away freedoms? It depends on how you frame the question
  11. Four GDP graphs that show how well Australia was doing – before Delta hit
  12. My super fund just failed the APRA performance test. What's next?
  13. Damien Hirst's dotty 'currency' art makes as much sense as Bitcoin
  14. Robber barons and high-speed traders dominate Australia’s water market
  15. Coles and Woolworths are moving to robot warehouses and on-demand labour as home deliveries soar
  16. Fate of detained Australian economist Sean Turnell may be tied to Aung Sung Suu Kyi
  17. Frydenberg's directions to ASIC throw the banking royal commission under a bus
  18. Qantas has grounds to mandate vaccination, but most blanket policies won't fly
  19. Mood, music and money: what our Spotify playlists reveal about the emotional nature of financial markets
  20. More than banking done right, consumer data rights are set to transform our lives
  21. Senate's vote to ban slave-made imports shows the weakness of Australia's Modern Slavery Act
  22. The official figures say wages aren't growing — here's why they're wrong
  23. Top economists in no rush to offer cash incentives for vaccination
  24. 3 ways 'algorithmic management' makes work more stressful and less satisfying
  25. Today's decisions lock in industry emissions for decades — here's how to get them right
  26. It’s all too easy to be offended by an innocent work email — but there are ways to avoid it
  27. Vital Signs: 4.6% unemployment rate hints at what's possible, but it's not the real thing
  28. No longer a temporary COVID measure, the government's super changes will most help wealthy tax dodgers
  29. BHP's offloading of oil and gas assets shows the global market has turned on fossil fuels
  30. The more video streaming services we get, the more we'll turn to piracy
  31. Australia is at risk of taking the wrong tack at the Glasgow climate talks, and slamming China is only part of it
  32. Forget massive seawalls, coastal wetlands offer the best storm protection money can buy
  33. Mid-COVID, our investigation finds few vulnerabilities in Australia's supply chains
  34. The RBA is not a law unto itself — an external review would be good for it
  35. Australia was a model for protecting people from COVID-19 — and then we dumped half a million people back into poverty
  36. Can Australian employers make you get a COVID-19 vaccine? Mostly not — but here's when they can
  37. MediaWorks and NZ's problem with toxic work cultures — why HR can’t fix everything
  38. Crown Resorts is not too big to fail. It has failed already
  39. If machines can be inventors, could AI soon monopolise technology?
  40. Would a $300 vaccination payment work? There are reasons to doubt it
  41. Why Jack Dorsey's Square paid a record $39 billion for Afterpay
  42. Paying Australians $300 to get fully vaccinated would be value for money
  43. Equality and fairness: vaccines against this pandemic of mistrust
  44. Top economists say cutting immigration is no way to boost wages
  45. Vital Signs: Uber's impact on traffic accidents is a lesson in calculating social benefit
  46. Gamblers bet more when in the dark: feedback can curb their online losses
  47. A COVID 'ring of steel' around Sydney would play havoc with Australia's supply chains
  48. Australian farmers are adapting well to climate change, but there's work ahead
  49. Now that Australia's inflation rate is 3.8%, is it time to worry?
  50. Aggressive marketing has driven the rise of the double-cab ute on New Zealand streets — time to hit the brakes?