You would have to call your previous employers to receive that. I do not think that anyone has a complete list of everyone's work employment history.
Call your employment security office and request a copy of it.
A request for employment is a job application.
Write the Social Security office and request a formal history of job employment history
Go to your local Social Security office, and request a 10 year work history report.
No
Go to www.ssa.gov and get a Request for Social Security Earnings Information form. Mail it in, pay the fee, and in a few months your past employment history will be mailed!
They can certainly request a copy. It does not have to be provided.
Both are grammatically correct, both are exactly the same except for the question mark at the end of your question, which belongs on the end of the sentence. May I request a copy of your catalogue May I request a copy of your catalogue? A suggestion for actually using this sentence in business writing; the answer to the question is yes or no, which is not the same as fulfilling a request for a copy of the catalogue. Business writing must clearly say what you want. Some alternative sentences: I am writing to request a copy of your catalogue... Please send a copy of your catalogue to ...
Despite the advertising of several commercial companies to the contrary, there is NO foolproof way to research anyone's "history" on-line. For a criminal history check (for instance for employment purposes) - go to your local law enforcement agency and fill out a detailed request - pay a small administrative fee - and you will receive a copy of THAT individuals criminal record.
That's correct!
High, very likely
you can request a copy at www.archives.gov.