Self-Employed Workers Association - traducción al español
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

Self-Employed Workers Association - traducción al español

INDIAN NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATION
Self-Employed Women's Association; SEWA; Textile Labour Association; Self-Employed Women's Association of India; Self Employed Women’s Association
  • Products at the SEWA Hansiba Store in Mumbai
  • Ela Bhatt, founder and past president of SEWA, appreciating the fabrics at Qalandia Women's Cooperative
  • Reema Nanavaty]] listen as women artisans share stories of their involvement with SEWA at the Hansiba Store in Mumbai, India, 18 July 2009.

Self-Employed Workers Association      
Asociación de trabajadores individuales
self employed         
  • Self-employment in the UK, 2008 to 2014
ACT OF BEING EMPLOYED BY ONESELF
Self-employed; Self employment; Self-employment tax; Self employment tax; Self employed
trabajador independiente, trabajador por cuenta propia, autónomo, que trabaja por cuenta propia
self-employment         
  • Self-employment in the UK, 2008 to 2014
ACT OF BEING EMPLOYED BY ONESELF
Self-employed; Self employment; Self-employment tax; Self employment tax; Self employed
(n.) = trabajo por cuenta propia, trabajo autónomo, autoempleo
Ex: In the quest for self-employment the author established himself as a self-employed historical researcher specialising in detailed histories of private and business properties.

Definición

delantero

Wikipedia

Self Employed Women's Association

Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA), meaning "service" in several Indian languages, is a trade union based in Ahmedabad, India, that promotes the rights of low-income, independently employed female workers. Nearly 2 million workers are members of  the Self-Employed Women’s Association across 8 states in India. Self-employed women are defined as those who do not have a fixed employer-employee relationship and do not receive a fixed salary and social protection like that of formally-employed workers and therefore have a more precarious income and life. SEWA organises around the goal of full employment in which a woman secures work, income, food, and social security like health care, child care, insurance, pension and shelter. The principles behind accomplishing these goals are struggle and development, meaning negotiating with stakeholders and providing services, respectively.

SEWA was founded in 1972 by labor lawyer and organiser Ela Bhatt. It emerged from the Women's Wing of the Textile Labour Association (TLA), a labour union founded by Gandhi in 1918. The organisation grew very quickly, with 30,000 members in 1996, to 318,527 in 2000, to 1,919,676 in 2013., and nearly 2 million in 2023. Even before the financial crisis of 2008, over 90% of India's working population was in the informal sector (Shakuntala 2015), and 94% of working women in 2009 worked in the informal sector (Bhatt 2009). India's history and patriarchal systems also contributes to this disparity because traditional gender roles exclude women from regular, secure forms of labour.