In the United States, federal law generally limits the number of hours an employer can require an employee to work to 40 hours per week, with overtime pay required for any hours worked beyond that. However, some states may have additional regulations that further limit the number of hours worked in a day or week. It is important to check your state's specific labor laws for more information.
Yes you could, your employer cannot make you work that many but you could choose to.
In the United States, employers can legally require employees to work up to 40 hours per week, with additional hours considered overtime and subject to specific regulations.
In the United States, federal law generally limits the number of hours an employer can require you to work to 40 hours per week. However, some states may have different regulations, so it's important to check your local laws. Employers may also offer overtime pay for hours worked beyond 40 in a week.
This depends on age and location.
up to 6 with a little break
Working long hours and hard doesn't make you insane.
8 hours in the UK...
It's up to the employer.
12
56 The above is a stupid answer! The real answer depends on who you work for, your employment arrangement, and what state or country you work in.
That depends on whether you are an employee or a manufactured product. If you are an employee, then your employer can't force you to do anything that you don't want to do, simply because you're an employee, not a slave. Whenever your employer asks you to do anything, you always have three choices for your resonse: 1). Comply 2). Negotiate 3). Walk
As many as it wishes, unless the employer has volunteered to be bound by a contract of employment.