South Australian Employment Tribunal
0 sources
South Australian Employment Tribunal
Summary
South Australian Employment Tribunal is an Industrial relations commission[1]. It draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (industrial_relations_commission category, ranking #2 of 1).[2]
Key Facts
- South Australian Employment Tribunal is in the country of Australia[3].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's instance of is recorded as Industrial relations commission[4].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's instance of is recorded as court of record[5].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's headquarters location is recorded as Adelaide[6].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal comprises President of the South Australian Employment Tribunal[7].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal comprises Deputy President of the South Australian Employment Tribunal[8].
- 2014 marks the founding of South Australian Employment Tribunal[9].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's parent organization or unit is recorded as Attorney-General's Department[10].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's official website is recorded as http://www.saet.sa.gov.au/[11].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's applies to jurisdiction is recorded as South Australia[12].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's official name is recorded as South Australian Employment Tribunal[13].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's official name is recorded as South Australian Employment Court[14].
- South Australian Employment Tribunal's position held by head of the organization is recorded as President of the South Australian Employment Tribunal[15].
Body
Founding
2014 marks the founding of South Australian Employment Tribunal[9].
Identity
Official names include South Australian Employment Tribunal[13] and South Australian Employment Court[14].
Operations
South Australian Employment Tribunal's headquarters location is recorded as Adelaide[6]. Its parent organization or unit is recorded as Attorney-General's Department[10].
Why It Matters
South Australian Employment Tribunal draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (industrial_relations_commission category, ranking #2 of 1).[2]