The main conclusions of this survey may he briefly re-stated thus: first, restrictions on conduct appear in a wide range of employment, public and private, and the justification for these is the public interest, ascertainable by reference to the duties involved; second, there seem to be no valid reasons, legal or political, why the government employee should be denied rights against the government as his employer, enforceable either in the ordinary courts or otherwise; and finally, there are strong grounds for asserting' that government employment is not, as such, sui generis and invariably subject to fundamentally different considerations from those arising in private employment
The aim of this article is to investigate differences between the British public and private sectors...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment Of public employees\u27 First ...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
Beginning with Justice Douglass\u27s assertion that the State is bound in the same ways when acting ...
Prior to the enactment of the Constitution, common law notions such as the audi alteram partem rule,...
A number of contrasting and conflicting approaches have emerged in the high courts, the Supreme Cour...
In Local 507, IBEW v. Hastings, the Nebraska Supreme Court has followed the majority rule in declari...
While there seems to be considerable justification for viewing thepublic employee as the functional ...
Governmental activities affect each of us in a myriad of ways. The government\u27s role as employer ...
There are nearly three million federal employees, of whom 50.8 percent are professional, technical o...
This paper discusses and analyses the current evolution of the exceptional employment law rules gove...
This paper examined the state of the law on removal of public officers from office. It observed that...
The question of whether a government employee may be dismissed solely because of his political party...
For a long time, European companies have found that civil servants are bound by the state and can no...
A person’s employment contract whether in the public or private sector may either be a regular full-...
The aim of this article is to investigate differences between the British public and private sectors...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment Of public employees\u27 First ...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
Beginning with Justice Douglass\u27s assertion that the State is bound in the same ways when acting ...
Prior to the enactment of the Constitution, common law notions such as the audi alteram partem rule,...
A number of contrasting and conflicting approaches have emerged in the high courts, the Supreme Cour...
In Local 507, IBEW v. Hastings, the Nebraska Supreme Court has followed the majority rule in declari...
While there seems to be considerable justification for viewing thepublic employee as the functional ...
Governmental activities affect each of us in a myriad of ways. The government\u27s role as employer ...
There are nearly three million federal employees, of whom 50.8 percent are professional, technical o...
This paper discusses and analyses the current evolution of the exceptional employment law rules gove...
This paper examined the state of the law on removal of public officers from office. It observed that...
The question of whether a government employee may be dismissed solely because of his political party...
For a long time, European companies have found that civil servants are bound by the state and can no...
A person’s employment contract whether in the public or private sector may either be a regular full-...
The aim of this article is to investigate differences between the British public and private sectors...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment Of public employees\u27 First ...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...