From October 7-23, 2005, the strike by the 38,000-strong British Columbia Teachers’ Federation (BCTF) was the “main event” in BC labour relations. Teachers demonstrated enormous solidarity and determination to achieve a fair negotiated settlement that they could put to a vote. The focus of this paper is not the BCTF strike itself but the remarkable sympathy strike action organized in support of BCTF, primarily by the BC division of CUPE. Such worker action is highly unusual. Since the 1940s sympathy strike action has been illegal and extremely rare. This paper sets CUPE-BC’s strikes in support of BCTF in the context of the legal framework established over half a century ago and the decline of sympathy strikes that followed. It then summariz...
Abstract The twenty-first century has seen reliance on courts and judicial means rather than strike...
The general hostility of courts towards workers’ collective action is well documented, but even agai...
At the turn of the century, the legislative, administrative, and judicial branches of the Canadian s...
CUPE On Strike offers a profile of the 1502 CUPE strikes since the union's inception in 1963 until 2...
The British Columbia Teachers\u27 Federation (BCTF), representing all public elementary and secondar...
Constitutional labour rights in Canada now protect workers’ freedom to organize and bargain collecti...
Constitutional labour rights in Canada now protect workers’ freedom to organize and bargain collecti...
rior to 1975 and the passage of the School Boards and Teachers Collective Negotiations Act (Bill 100...
On October 26, 2000 approximately 2200 members of Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 39...
This paper examines strikes as an expression of worker voice. It begins with a discussion of the con...
In the summer of 2005, the Society of Energy Professionals Hydro One Local engaged in unprecedented ...
This article locates strike ballot laws at the intersection of two of labour law’s primary goals, pr...
It is universally accepted that in the economic battle of a strike each individual striking employee...
This paper looks at the deep roots of striking as a social practice in Canada, by providing an ana...
The history of Alberta's meatpacking workers is closely connected with the broader historical strugg...
Abstract The twenty-first century has seen reliance on courts and judicial means rather than strike...
The general hostility of courts towards workers’ collective action is well documented, but even agai...
At the turn of the century, the legislative, administrative, and judicial branches of the Canadian s...
CUPE On Strike offers a profile of the 1502 CUPE strikes since the union's inception in 1963 until 2...
The British Columbia Teachers\u27 Federation (BCTF), representing all public elementary and secondar...
Constitutional labour rights in Canada now protect workers’ freedom to organize and bargain collecti...
Constitutional labour rights in Canada now protect workers’ freedom to organize and bargain collecti...
rior to 1975 and the passage of the School Boards and Teachers Collective Negotiations Act (Bill 100...
On October 26, 2000 approximately 2200 members of Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 39...
This paper examines strikes as an expression of worker voice. It begins with a discussion of the con...
In the summer of 2005, the Society of Energy Professionals Hydro One Local engaged in unprecedented ...
This article locates strike ballot laws at the intersection of two of labour law’s primary goals, pr...
It is universally accepted that in the economic battle of a strike each individual striking employee...
This paper looks at the deep roots of striking as a social practice in Canada, by providing an ana...
The history of Alberta's meatpacking workers is closely connected with the broader historical strugg...
Abstract The twenty-first century has seen reliance on courts and judicial means rather than strike...
The general hostility of courts towards workers’ collective action is well documented, but even agai...
At the turn of the century, the legislative, administrative, and judicial branches of the Canadian s...