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The advantages of arbitration over litigation, the arbitrator's role in ensuring a fair hearing, admissibility of evidence, procedural rulings concerning third party participation, subpoenas, due process protections, medical affidavits, and witnesses are discussed in this voluem.
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Daniel Clark demonstrates the dramatic impact unionization made on the lives of textile workers in Henderson, North Carolina, in the decade after World War II. Focusing on the Harriet and Henderson Cotton Mills, he shows that workers valued the Textile Workers Union of America for more than the higher wages and improved benefits it secured for them. Specifically, Clark points to the importance members placed on union-instituted grievance and arbitration procedures, which most labor historians have seen as impediments rather than improvements. From the signing of contracts in 1943 until a devastating strike fifteen years later, the union gave local workers the tools they needed to secure at least some measure of workplace autonomy and respect from their employer. Union-instituted grievance procedures were not without flaws, says Clark, but they were the linchpin of these efforts. When arbitration and grievance agreements collapsed in 1958, the result was the strike that ultimately broke the union. Based on complete access to company archives and transcripts of grievance hearings, this case study recasts our understanding of labor-management relations in the postwar South.
In a book that confronts the moral choices that U.S. corporations make every day in the treatment of their workers, James A. Gross issues a clarion call for the transformation of the American workplace based on genuine respect for human rights, rather than whatever the economic and regulatory landscape might allow. Gross questions the nation's underlying fabric of values as reflected in its laws and our assumptions about workers and the workplace.Arguing that our market philosophy is incompatible with core principles of human rights, he forces readers to realign the country's labor policies so that they conform with the highest international human rights standards. To make his case, Gross as...
The works of fourteen distinguished arbitrators reveal just how arbitrators go about hearing and deciding a case. Each chapter examines a specific aspect of the arbitration process--arbitration and the law, new contract arbitration, the role of the arbitrator, running a hearing, prodecure and evidence, frequently disputed issues, factors influencing a decision, past practice, and writing the opinion.
Manual on the conduct of arbitration hearings in the USA - includes references.