Click here to go to 
AngloINFO Lisbon's front pageClick here to visit a list of
AngloINFO's local reference INFOrmation Pages
AngloINFO

· Global Home

· About AngloINFO

· AngloINFO News

· Contact

· Corporate

· Franchising

· Privacy Policy

Lisbon Local Reference INFOrmation
Share Share | Print Print
INFOrmation

Working in Portugal - Non-standard Employment

Contents:
Introduction

Moving to Portugal
Registration Procedures
The Residence Permit
Moving Goods
Moving Plants & Animals
Moving Financial Assets
Moving Cars
Finding Accommodation
Finding a School

Living in Portugal
The System
Taxes & Charges
Shopping
Accommodation
Cultural & Social Life
Private Life
Transport
The Health System

Working in Portugal
Recruitment
Applications
Recognition of Qualifications
Conclusion of Contracts
Amendments of Contracts
Remuneration
Working Time
Vocational Training
Annual Leave
Leave: Sickness, Maternity
End of Employment
Employment of Women
Special Categories
Occupational Risks
Sexual Harassment
Representation of Workers
Work Disputes
Work Non-standard Employment
Non-standard types of employment

Part-time work

This corresponds to normal weekly working hours equal to or less than 75% of those worked on a full-time basis in a comparable situation. Part-time employees enjoy the same rights and the same protection as full-time employees, unless different treatment is justified on objective grounds. Employees with a reduced capacity for work, people with chronic disabilities or illnesses and employees who are attending intermediate or higher education courses must be given preference in the hiring of part-time labour. Part-time employees' remuneration may not be less than the fraction of the remuneration of full-time employees corresponding to the adjusted working hours.

Temporary employment agency work

A scheme under which employees hired by a temporary employment enterprise undertake to work for a user enterprise. Temporary contracts of employment must be set down in writing, in duplicate, and must be entered into by the employee and the temporary employment enterprise. Contracts for the use of temporary labour (contracts entered into between the temporary employment enterprise and the user enterprise) are permitted only in the following cases: replacement of an absent employee, the need to fill jobs which are vacant when a recruitment process is under way; a temporary or exceptional increase in workload; a well-defined short-lived task; seasonal tasks; intermittent manpower requirements determined by fluctuations in workload; manpower requirements for carrying out projects which are limited in time, namely the setting up and restructuring of enterprises or establishments, assembly work and industrial repairs.

Itinerant work

Work in the shipping sector, railways and the transport of people and goods are regulated by multi-employer agreements. These agreements apply specific provisions in terms of working hours, for example. If the work involves travelling, the costs incurred are paid by means of daily subsistence allowances and by reimbursing accommodation expenses.

Homeworking

This corresponds to work performed in the employee's home or establishment, without legal subordination, the employee being deemed to be economically dependent on the beneficiary of the activity. Homeworkers and the beneficiary of the activity are covered, as beneficiary and contributor respectively, by the general social security scheme for employed labour.

Telework

The provision of work usually carried out, with legal subordination, outside the employer's enterprise by means of information and communication technologies.

Domestic work

The hiring of workers to perform activities whose purpose is to meet the personal or special needs of a family unit, its equivalent and its members, i.e.: preparation of meals, laundry, housework, supervision of and the provision of care for children, the elderly and the sick, etc. Domestic work contracts do not have a special form unless a fixed-term contract is entered into, in which case they must be in writing. Domestic work contracts involve a probation period of 90 days, unless a written stipulation provides for this period to be eliminated or reduced.

Useful information:
  • Law No 35/2004 of 29 July; Decree Law No 235/92 of 24 October
  • IDICT – Instituto do Desenvolvimento e Inspecção das Condições de Trabalho [Institute for the Development and Inspection of Working Conditions]
    Praça de Alvalade, 1 - 1749-073 Lisbon
    Tel: 217 924 500
    Fax: 217 924 597

Text last edited on: 12/2004

Source: European Union
© European Communities, 1995-2007
Reproduction is authorised.

myAngloINFO

· Sign in

· Become a member NOW!


Stay INFOrmed! with our weekly newsletter.

Today
World AIDS Day
International day of awareness of HIV and AIDS
Public Holiday
It's Independence Restoration Day, Dia da Restauração, commemorating independence from Spain in 1640.
Clean slate
Picture perfect
Sintra Caminhos
Sintra Caminhos
Walking paths in the Sintra countryside

^ Top of Page ^


Page generated at 22:37; Monday 1 December, 2008
Copyright © 2000-2008 AngloINFO Limited. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy, Terms of Use, About, Advertising, Contact.
AngloINFO: Everyday life in Portugal, in English

Find out more about AngloINFO in Portugal...