Since "country" is the highest level of government. Here in the U.S.A. our agency for occupational safety agency is O.S.H.A(www.osha.gov) but they have no jurisdiction outside our country. Same holds true for every country. There maybe treaties between countries with agreed minimum safety standards for workers.
OSHA sets and enforces occupational safety and health standards in the workplace, and also investigates whistle-blower complaints under a wide variety of laws administered by the Department of Labor. NIOSH, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, is a research institute charged with performing research on a broad range of occupational safety and health topics, and with recommending standards for OSHA to consider.
The banking laws differ from country to country and are currently being rewritten in most of them. The key objectives however are to be confidential, to minimize exposure to risk and to avoid corruption.
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Symptoms differ from a chemical to other.
No, the liability exposure is the same.
It depends on where you live. The laws differ from country to country and for the US the driving age laws differ from state to state.
controls differ from standards that they have same matrixas test specimen.
because there from another country
Sure they do, just like houses do.
They differ from country to country in many ways. Depends really on what you are actually looking for. See links below to get more info on global CO2 emissions.
Every kind of money has a different value in different country
yes it will differ if those countries are not in the same region