Historically, professional workers have displayed an ideology of individualism. Work is not a commodity to be sold on the market but a calling that constitutes personal identity while also conferring a relatively privileged class status. Professionals have asserted their legal rights as workers primarily through individual contract and tort theories that redress the potential loss of professional identity. Market instability and management techniques threaten to undermine the autonomy, judgment and control over job content that once characterized professional status. When that status is challenged at its core, labor becomes commodified and workers\u27 receptivity to union organizing or collective action around the assertion of individual em...
The common narrative on the evolution of employee D26benefits over the past several decades is that ...
Unions that represent professional and technical workers are at a critical juncture in their evoluti...
Lance Compa, senior lecturer at Cornell University\u27s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, de...
Historically, professional workers have displayed an ideology of individualism. Work is not a commod...
Professor Catherine Fisk of University of Southern California Law School discusses how the concepts ...
The influence of organized labor in the American workplace continues to decline as the percent organ...
For professionals, work is not a commodity to be sold on the market, but a calling that constitutes ...
This lecture discusses the impact of the recent recession, both directly and indirectly, on the righ...
Professor Richard Freeman, Herbert Ascherman Professor of Economics at Harvard University delivered ...
The theme of the 37th Annual Kenneth M. Piper Lecture in Labor Law is Does Work Law Have a Future i...
The lecture addresses the implications of improved technology, globalization of the economy, increas...
Professor Maria O\u27Brien Hylton surveys recent critical developments in the law of employer-sponso...
American labor law has largely failed to deliver a viable mechanism for employee representation in w...
Professor Williams\u27 lecture examines the impact of the increasing number of lawsuits filed by mot...
This lecture examines America\u27s approach to its older workers over the past 50 years and likely f...
The common narrative on the evolution of employee D26benefits over the past several decades is that ...
Unions that represent professional and technical workers are at a critical juncture in their evoluti...
Lance Compa, senior lecturer at Cornell University\u27s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, de...
Historically, professional workers have displayed an ideology of individualism. Work is not a commod...
Professor Catherine Fisk of University of Southern California Law School discusses how the concepts ...
The influence of organized labor in the American workplace continues to decline as the percent organ...
For professionals, work is not a commodity to be sold on the market, but a calling that constitutes ...
This lecture discusses the impact of the recent recession, both directly and indirectly, on the righ...
Professor Richard Freeman, Herbert Ascherman Professor of Economics at Harvard University delivered ...
The theme of the 37th Annual Kenneth M. Piper Lecture in Labor Law is Does Work Law Have a Future i...
The lecture addresses the implications of improved technology, globalization of the economy, increas...
Professor Maria O\u27Brien Hylton surveys recent critical developments in the law of employer-sponso...
American labor law has largely failed to deliver a viable mechanism for employee representation in w...
Professor Williams\u27 lecture examines the impact of the increasing number of lawsuits filed by mot...
This lecture examines America\u27s approach to its older workers over the past 50 years and likely f...
The common narrative on the evolution of employee D26benefits over the past several decades is that ...
Unions that represent professional and technical workers are at a critical juncture in their evoluti...
Lance Compa, senior lecturer at Cornell University\u27s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, de...