Apportionment of damages in fair representation suits represents one of the most unsettled issues in labor law today. Although the Supreme Court has attempted to establish a single governing principle for apportioning damages, lower courts have read this principle as authorizing two divergent standards for apportionments. Part I of this article traces the evolution from the Court\u27s original standard presented in Vaca v. Sipes through two subsequent applications of that standard: the Czosek v. O\u27Mara standard, which interpreted Vaca as placing the bulk of damages on the employer, and Justice Stewart\u27s standard taken from his concurrence in Hines v. Anchor Motor Freight, which interpreted Vaca as placing most of the damages on the...
Recent Supreme Court decisions have re-examined the traditional judicial deference paid to the resol...
The Supreme Court held that a party wholly successful in an unfair labor practice proceeding before ...
In 1962, the Supreme Court held in Sinclair Refining Co. v.Atkinson\u27 that section 4 of the Norris...
Apportionment of damages in fair representation suits represents one of the most unsettled issues in...
One of the best kept secrets in American labor law is that duty of fair representation jurisprudence...
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that a union may be liable to a discharged employee ...
The author analyzes the judicial development of the union\u27s duty of fair representation and explo...
Labor Law-APPORTIONMENT OF DAMAGES BETWEEN EMPLOYER AND UNION-THE SUPREME COURT\u27S RECESSION FROM ...
In this Article, Professors Harper and Lupu argue that a model of principled democracy can systema...
In the first case in which the issue was the subject of an appeal, the Fifth Circuit held that a lab...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The duty of fair representation in labor negotiations was born in Supreme Court case law to protect ...
This article will first review the Supreme Court\u27s arbitration jurisprudence, concentrating on la...
The two U.S. Supreme Court decisions rendered in late May, 1958, involving labor unions, have receiv...
On December 10, 1962, the United States Supreme Court, in Smith v. Evening News Ass\u27n, establishe...
Recent Supreme Court decisions have re-examined the traditional judicial deference paid to the resol...
The Supreme Court held that a party wholly successful in an unfair labor practice proceeding before ...
In 1962, the Supreme Court held in Sinclair Refining Co. v.Atkinson\u27 that section 4 of the Norris...
Apportionment of damages in fair representation suits represents one of the most unsettled issues in...
One of the best kept secrets in American labor law is that duty of fair representation jurisprudence...
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that a union may be liable to a discharged employee ...
The author analyzes the judicial development of the union\u27s duty of fair representation and explo...
Labor Law-APPORTIONMENT OF DAMAGES BETWEEN EMPLOYER AND UNION-THE SUPREME COURT\u27S RECESSION FROM ...
In this Article, Professors Harper and Lupu argue that a model of principled democracy can systema...
In the first case in which the issue was the subject of an appeal, the Fifth Circuit held that a lab...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The duty of fair representation in labor negotiations was born in Supreme Court case law to protect ...
This article will first review the Supreme Court\u27s arbitration jurisprudence, concentrating on la...
The two U.S. Supreme Court decisions rendered in late May, 1958, involving labor unions, have receiv...
On December 10, 1962, the United States Supreme Court, in Smith v. Evening News Ass\u27n, establishe...
Recent Supreme Court decisions have re-examined the traditional judicial deference paid to the resol...
The Supreme Court held that a party wholly successful in an unfair labor practice proceeding before ...
In 1962, the Supreme Court held in Sinclair Refining Co. v.Atkinson\u27 that section 4 of the Norris...