Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891, addressed the dehumanizing conditions many workers faced and affirmed their rights. It upheld private property rights but also supported workers' rights to just wages, unions, and strikes if necessary. The document outlined duties of workers to perform tasks fully and not engage in violence, as well as duties of employers to treat workers justly and not exploit them. It argued the state should protect workers and promote just wages for the common good of society.
Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891, addressed the dehumanizing conditions many workers faced and affirmed their rights. It upheld private property rights but also supported workers' rights to just wages, unions, and strikes if necessary. The document outlined duties of workers to perform tasks fully and not engage in violence, as well as duties of employers to treat workers justly and not exploit them. It argued the state should protect workers and promote just wages for the common good of society.
Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891, addressed the dehumanizing conditions many workers faced and affirmed their rights. It upheld private property rights but also supported workers' rights to just wages, unions, and strikes if necessary. The document outlined duties of workers to perform tasks fully and not engage in violence, as well as duties of employers to treat workers justly and not exploit them. It argued the state should protect workers and promote just wages for the common good of society.
Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891, addressed the dehumanizing conditions many workers faced and affirmed their rights. It upheld private property rights but also supported workers' rights to just wages, unions, and strikes if necessary. The document outlined duties of workers to perform tasks fully and not engage in violence, as well as duties of employers to treat workers justly and not exploit them. It argued the state should protect workers and promote just wages for the common good of society.
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RERUM NOVARUM
RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF
CAPITAL LABOR
REPORTED BY: Clarisse B. Accad (2L)
Rerum Novarum means of Revolutionary Change or Rights and Duties of Capital Labor. It is an encyclical issued by Pope Leo XIII on May 15, 1981.
Something must be done for the workers
who are suffering; Guilds, which have disappeared, cannot protect the worker; States and public institutions have rejected the faith; Ownership of private property SOCIALISMS ANSWER remove private property. Property, or capital, is simply wages in another form. Private property is a natural right. Indeed permanent possession of things is part of what human requires for life. Addresses the dehumanizing conditions in which many workers labor and affirms workers rights: to just wages, rest, and fair treatment; to form unions; and to strike if necessary.
Upholds individuals right to hold private
property but also notes the role of the state in facilitating distributive justice so that workers can adequately support their families and someday own property of their own. Duties of the Proletarian and the Worker fully and faithfully to perform their agreed upon tasks Never to injure the property or person of the employer Never to engage in violence or disorder to defend one's cause Do not associate with hucksters Duties of the Wealthy owner and the employer View every worker with the dignity an not as a bondmen. To know that working for gain is creditable To know that to misuse men, to view them as means to an end is truly shameful and inhuman. In dealing with workers, their religion and soul ought to be kept in mind Make sure they have time to fulfill their religious duties Protect them from corruption and dangerous occasions Do not lead him away from his family Encourage him away from squandering his earnings Do not overlay tax employees Do not employ people to labor unsuited to their sex and age. Give them a just wage To gather profit from the need of others i.e. the indigent or destitute is against human/divine law. defraud someone of just wage is a crime that calls for vengeance from Heaven The employer may not cut the wages by force, fraud, or usury Fundamental truths about Ownership
a) As the ancients taught, the right to own is different from
a right to use money as one wills. b) The Church teaches that our possessions are not ours but really Gods and so must be used without hesitation when others are in need. c) We are not required to distribute what we need to live or to maintain what is becoming, but from what remains we ought to give. This is charity. d) To sum up, then, what has been said: Whoever has received from the divine bounty a large share of temporal blessings, whether they be external and material, or gifts of the mind, has received them for the purpose of using them for the perfecting of his own nature, and, at the same time, that he may employ them, as the steward of Gods providence, for the benefit of others. Role of the state The General welfare is met through: 1. Moral rule 2. Well-regulated family life 3. Respect for religion and justice 4. Moderate and fair public taxes 5. The progress of arts and trades 6. Fruitful harvests 7. Essentially, anything which makes the citizens better and happier. Since the end of society is to make men better, then public life ought to be structured so as to make it easier for virtuous action.
Justice for the worker is in the best interest of
the State for it is only by the labor of working men that States grow rich. The State ought to: Give special care to the poor and the working class who have no resource of their own to fall back upon. Protect the private property of the workers from those who would take advantage of them. Protect mans soul. Secure proper conditions for the workers. Promote just wage. If the worker and the employer both agree to a wage, then it must be JUST WAGE.
If the worker and the employer both agree
to a wage, then it must be JUST WAGE. Labor has two realties: 1. It is PERSONAL, i.e. bound up with his personality. 2. It is also NECESSARY, i.e. required for the maintenance of life of those things which keep us alive. Associations/Unions These association is concerned with the private good of the members of the association. Since their end meets the natural need to associate with each other for aid, they cannot be prohibited by the State, since they, again, precede the State. The associations ought to be structured according to the betterment of its members. It should have good and prudent leaders, a fair administration of common funds, it should keep the rights and duties of the workers and the employees in mind. When there are labor disputes, it should set up
commitees to help come to an equitable agreement.
At all tims, work should be found for its members, and a fund should be set up for the needs of the workers and their families. Right of association
CIVIL SOCIETY exist to protect the
common good and preserve the rights of all equally. PRIVATE SOCIETIES are diverse and exit for various purposes within the civil society. E.g. Families, Business partnerships, Religious orders, and Trade Unions. Trade Unions The most important of all are workingmens union, for these virtually include all the rest it were greatly to be desired that they should become more numerous and more efficient. Pope Leo supported unions, yet opposed at least some parts of the then emerging labor movement. He urged workers, if their union seemed on the wrong track, to form alternative associations. Common Good The interest of all, whether high or low, are equal. The members of the working classes are citizens by nature and by the same right as the rich; they are real parts, living the life which make is, through the family, the body of the commonwealth therefore the public administration must duly and solicitously provide for the welfare and the comfort of the working classes; otherwise, that law of injustice will be violated which ordains that each man shall have his due. Man not only should possess the fruits of the earth, but also the very soil, inasmuch as from the produce of the earth he has to lay by the provision All human forsubsistence the future. is derived either from labor on ones own land, or from some toil, some calling, which is paid for either in the produce of the land itself, or in that which is exchanged for what the When a man turns the activity of his mind land brings. and the strength of his body toward procuring the fruits of nature, by such act he makes his own that portion of natures field which he cultivates; the labor of the working class the exercise of their skill, and the employment of their strength, in the cultivation of the land, and in the workshops of trade is especially responsible and quite indispensable indeed it may be truly said that it is only by the labor of working men that states grown rich. Preferential offer for the poor
For those who possess not the gifts of
fortune, they are taught by the Church that in Gods sight, poverty is no disgrace, and that there is nothing to be ashamed of in earning their bread by labor.
Equal treatment is preferable, but when
the general laws are not adequate to protect the poor and vulnerable members of society, it is just to give them more help according to their need.
g.r. No. 195297 Coca Cola Bottlers Philippines Inc. Petitioner vs. Iloilo Coca Cola Plant Employees Labor Union Iccpelu as Represented by Wilfredo l. Aguirre Respondent.decision Supreme Court e Library