Prepare for the OSH Security Test with comprehensive quizzes featuring flashcards and multiple choice questions, complete with hints and detailed explanations. Ace your exam!

Each practice test/flash card set has 50 randomly selected questions from a bank of over 500. You'll get a new set of questions each time!

Practice this question and more.


During a labour dispute, which situation would best describe an Injunction?

  1. Special rights and authorities for police officers and security guards.

  2. Legal right under the Charter of Rights & Freedoms.

  3. A juncture point of an intersection where more than two streets meet.

  4. A court order limiting the number of picketers allowed on the picket line

The correct answer is: A court order limiting the number of picketers allowed on the picket line

The correct answer is the situation involving a court order limiting the number of picketers allowed on the picket line. This describes an injunction accurately because an injunction is a legal order issued by a court that requires individuals or entities to do or refrain from doing specific actions. In the context of a labor dispute, such an injunction can be used to control the circumstances of a strike or picketing activities, including imposing restrictions on the number of participants to prevent disruptions or maintain public order. The other options do not relate directly to the legal concept of an injunction. The reference to special rights and authorities for police officers and security guards pertains more to law enforcement powers rather than a judicial directive. The reference to a legal right under the Charter of Rights & Freedoms involves fundamental freedoms but does not specifically denote an injunction. Lastly, describing a juncture point of an intersection does not have any bearing on legal proceedings or orders. Hence, the focus on the court order limiting picketers is the clearest representation of an injunction in the context of a labor dispute.