The 2016 Trade Union Act (TUA) added ‘draconian’ restrictions to the already tortuous postal balloting regime for holding lawful strikes. The government predicted that 29–35% of ballots would lose. Using data from trade union returns to the Certification Officer, the first detailed account of ballots under the TUA shows that unions have, generally, mobilised successfully to ‘get the vote out’. Far fewer ballots now fail to win a simple majority; the 50% turnout barrier has led to only half the predicted losses; the 40% yes-vote rule in ‘important public services’ has limited independent effect. To avoid reballoting under the 6-month ballot mandate, unions often launch into longer (mainly discontinuous) strikes. Judged on these criteria, the...
The amendments introduced by the Labour Relations Amendment Act 8 of 2018 (LRAA) saw what was widely...
The issue of violent and protracted strikes has been a source of debate on many labour platforms in ...
Abstract: It is trite that the bargaining relationship between the employer and the employee is uneq...
In 2016, the UK Parliament passed the Trade Union Act 2016 (TU Act 2016), which introduced new quoru...
Since 2016, new legislation governing strike ballots has made it more difficult for trade unions to ...
According to the authors of this timely report, the government is attempting to rush into law ‘the m...
The laws regulating the conduct and organisation of ballots for industrial action, developed by cons...
There has been much discussion of the justifiability of strikes by healthcare workers, but comparati...
Our aim in this article is to analyse the provisions of the Trade Union Act 2016 that deal with pre-...
Trade union strikes can legally go ahead if more than half the votes are in favour of action, regard...
Purpose: The paper responds to calls for ‘best practice’ on how trade unions may respond to member v...
This article locates strike ballot laws at the intersection of two of labour law’s primary goals, pr...
Today sees the largest public sector strike since the 1970s. Tim Leunig argues that the ability for ...
Although trade union membership in the UK went into serious decline in the decades following the Con...
The consequences of strike ballots are analysed in a non-cooperative model of negotiations between a...
The amendments introduced by the Labour Relations Amendment Act 8 of 2018 (LRAA) saw what was widely...
The issue of violent and protracted strikes has been a source of debate on many labour platforms in ...
Abstract: It is trite that the bargaining relationship between the employer and the employee is uneq...
In 2016, the UK Parliament passed the Trade Union Act 2016 (TU Act 2016), which introduced new quoru...
Since 2016, new legislation governing strike ballots has made it more difficult for trade unions to ...
According to the authors of this timely report, the government is attempting to rush into law ‘the m...
The laws regulating the conduct and organisation of ballots for industrial action, developed by cons...
There has been much discussion of the justifiability of strikes by healthcare workers, but comparati...
Our aim in this article is to analyse the provisions of the Trade Union Act 2016 that deal with pre-...
Trade union strikes can legally go ahead if more than half the votes are in favour of action, regard...
Purpose: The paper responds to calls for ‘best practice’ on how trade unions may respond to member v...
This article locates strike ballot laws at the intersection of two of labour law’s primary goals, pr...
Today sees the largest public sector strike since the 1970s. Tim Leunig argues that the ability for ...
Although trade union membership in the UK went into serious decline in the decades following the Con...
The consequences of strike ballots are analysed in a non-cooperative model of negotiations between a...
The amendments introduced by the Labour Relations Amendment Act 8 of 2018 (LRAA) saw what was widely...
The issue of violent and protracted strikes has been a source of debate on many labour platforms in ...
Abstract: It is trite that the bargaining relationship between the employer and the employee is uneq...