Job
A job is any legal activity that allows an individual to perform a service and in return earn credits they can use to buy things.
A job can mean "some work that has to be done", for example: there are jobs to be done in the house: washing up, mending things that are broken, etc.
A job can also mean: work that a person does to earn money. The word "job" may be used when a person works for someone else "an employer" who pays them for the work. For example, a teacher's job is to teach children or adults. A taxi driver's job is to drive people in a taxi. A firefighter rescues people from burning buildings and puts out fires. A dermatologist's job is to diagnose and treat skin diseases. Some jobs pay very little.
The International Labour Organization was established to make people's job conditions better. It became an organization of the United Nations in 1946.
Related pages
- International Labour Organization
- Constitution
- Constitutional economics
- Full employment
- Job satisfaction
- Recruitment
- Unemployment
Job Media
A World War II aircraft worker, Vega Aircraft Corporation, Burbank, California, 1942.
Piano tuner is an example of an unusual profession.
Women carpenters working at the Tarrant Hut Workshops, 3 miles from Calais, 26 June 1918
Serving staff is an example of a common profession.
Women working at the Dun Emer Press, c. 1903