This paper reviews theories and evidence on the effect of “right-to-work” laws on union members’ satisfaction with their unions. With the increase of right-to-work activity at the state level, and with federal right-to-work legislation pending in Congress, this has returned as an important political issue. Following a brief review of how the hypotheses of “taste,” “free-rider,” and “bargaining power” can influence various effects of right-to-work laws, the idea of utility maximization paired with measures of union satisfaction is explored to show theoretical evidence that greater levels of union satisfaction could exist in right-to-work states than exist in non-right-to-work states. Arguments for both positive and negative effects are compa...
Ryan Dodds How do right-to-work (RTW) laws impact workplace safety? RTW laws allow employees covered...
Purpose: States with Right-to-Work (RTW) law coverage have increased since 2012, with union membersh...
There are many misconceptions about “right-to-work” laws. This sounds like it would be a plus for wo...
This paper reviews theories and evidence on the effect of “right-to-work” laws on union members’ sat...
State right-to-work laws, the subject of considerable controversy in the industrial relations field,...
This paper uses two complementary approaches to estimate the effect of right-to-work (RTW) laws on w...
This paper explored the following issues: a) what is meant by “right to work;” b) the legal issues i...
This paper builds upon prior literature to examine right-to-work legislation and how it affects unio...
The issue of unionization is an enduring one both politically and economically. A major subset withi...
This paper investigates the effects of state right-to-work (RTW) laws on individuals’ well-being and...
This is a brief 2013 update to the Bureau of Labor Education’s (BLE) 2011 briefing paper, “The Truth...
It is a well known fact that the extent of unionization is lower in states with Right-to-Work (RTW) ...
The 1947 Taft-Hartley amendments to the National Labor Relations Act (1935) authorized a state's rig...
In March, Wisconsin controversially became the 25th state to adopt ‘right to work’ legislation which...
The labor movement of the U. S. continues to bring the issue of worker rights to the forefront of Am...
Ryan Dodds How do right-to-work (RTW) laws impact workplace safety? RTW laws allow employees covered...
Purpose: States with Right-to-Work (RTW) law coverage have increased since 2012, with union membersh...
There are many misconceptions about “right-to-work” laws. This sounds like it would be a plus for wo...
This paper reviews theories and evidence on the effect of “right-to-work” laws on union members’ sat...
State right-to-work laws, the subject of considerable controversy in the industrial relations field,...
This paper uses two complementary approaches to estimate the effect of right-to-work (RTW) laws on w...
This paper explored the following issues: a) what is meant by “right to work;” b) the legal issues i...
This paper builds upon prior literature to examine right-to-work legislation and how it affects unio...
The issue of unionization is an enduring one both politically and economically. A major subset withi...
This paper investigates the effects of state right-to-work (RTW) laws on individuals’ well-being and...
This is a brief 2013 update to the Bureau of Labor Education’s (BLE) 2011 briefing paper, “The Truth...
It is a well known fact that the extent of unionization is lower in states with Right-to-Work (RTW) ...
The 1947 Taft-Hartley amendments to the National Labor Relations Act (1935) authorized a state's rig...
In March, Wisconsin controversially became the 25th state to adopt ‘right to work’ legislation which...
The labor movement of the U. S. continues to bring the issue of worker rights to the forefront of Am...
Ryan Dodds How do right-to-work (RTW) laws impact workplace safety? RTW laws allow employees covered...
Purpose: States with Right-to-Work (RTW) law coverage have increased since 2012, with union membersh...
There are many misconceptions about “right-to-work” laws. This sounds like it would be a plus for wo...