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Labor and employment arbitration law simplified. Authoritative coverage provides a description of the origin, development, and practice of labor arbitration. Text focuses on the fundamentals of the labor arbitration process and explores the major arbitration law issues, their importance, and the conflicting opinions on them.
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The 1990s saw the end of Australia and New Zealand's comprehensive conciliation and arbitration systems. Governments on both sides of the Tasman have found a rigid labour market to be incompatible with an ever more open and dynamic economy. This book covers all jurisdictions. It collects the detail of the reforms with contributions on a national level and State by State in Australia. It analyses the nature of the reforms, their consequences and their prospects. The editor, Dennis Nolan, provides an international perspective and a comparison to American labour law reform. In New Zealand, the Employment Contracts Act 1991, described as the most radical labour relations reform in the industrialised world in half a century, removed the old ways in one move. In Australia the federal system has meant a more diverse approach as the Commonwealth and States have experimented with various forms of deregulation.
Constitutes a historical and institutional development of the law of labor relations in the United States. Part 2 is a step-by-step analysis of each principle of law essential to the formulation and domestication of the process for collectivizing individual weakness into organized strength. Includes a short history of collective bargaining and a long analysis of its problems. Includes labor as a commodity, paternal protection, the need for balance, establishing collective bargaining, union weapons for establishing collective bargaining and achieving bargaining goals, negotiation of the collective agreement, problems arising under the collective agreement, and collective bargaining in public employment.
Republishes articles by two senior legal historians. Besides summarizing what has now become classical literature in the field, it offers illuminating insight into what it means to be a professional legal historian.