[Excerpt] Union-management cooperation is not a passing fad. It is not a new, or even a recent, development on the American labor relations scene. Nonetheless, interest in this subject has been growing. It is the purpose of this article, first, to clarify the meaning of union-management cooperation, indicating what it is and what it is not; second, to describe its history in the United States, going back to World War I; third, to explain the forces, both past and present, that have led to the development of union-management cooperation; fourth, to describe the various mechanisms employed to achieve this cooperation, including the levels of involvement and their scope; fifth, to set forth the necessary and sufficient conditions for successfu...
[Excerpt] American history reflects a long cycle of trade union decline and growth. Analysts routine...
[Excerpt] The current environment presents dramatic challenges for the American labor movement. Stru...
In this article, Professor Schwab compares the union member-leader relationship to the corporate sha...
[Excerpt] As unions and management work together on cooperative programs, this cooperation not only ...
[Excerpt] In analyzing labor-management cooperation, it is important to be clear on what it is not. ...
\u27Cooperation\u27 sounds too much like \u27cooption.\u27 \u27Collaboration\u27 recalls the Nazis i...
[Excerpt] Officialdom\u27s call for labor and management to cooperate is a recurring theme in Americ...
[Excerpt] Andy Banks\u27 and Jack Metzgar\u27s analysis of current cooperation programs is right on ...
Much has been written in recent years about the need for unions and managements in the United States...
Presents the findings of a five-year study of the structure, process and impact of six forms of unio...
Cooke answers important questions about labor-management cooperative efforts and addresses the probl...
Examines a variety of cooperative arrangements and the resulting problems and successes.https://rese...
[Excerpt] The New Unity Partnership (NUP) has stirred up a firestorm of controversy in union circles...
[Excerpt] I am happy to comment on a provocative monograph that raises important issues for union po...
Cooperation, as it exists today in labor management relations, lets much to be desired. Although the...
[Excerpt] American history reflects a long cycle of trade union decline and growth. Analysts routine...
[Excerpt] The current environment presents dramatic challenges for the American labor movement. Stru...
In this article, Professor Schwab compares the union member-leader relationship to the corporate sha...
[Excerpt] As unions and management work together on cooperative programs, this cooperation not only ...
[Excerpt] In analyzing labor-management cooperation, it is important to be clear on what it is not. ...
\u27Cooperation\u27 sounds too much like \u27cooption.\u27 \u27Collaboration\u27 recalls the Nazis i...
[Excerpt] Officialdom\u27s call for labor and management to cooperate is a recurring theme in Americ...
[Excerpt] Andy Banks\u27 and Jack Metzgar\u27s analysis of current cooperation programs is right on ...
Much has been written in recent years about the need for unions and managements in the United States...
Presents the findings of a five-year study of the structure, process and impact of six forms of unio...
Cooke answers important questions about labor-management cooperative efforts and addresses the probl...
Examines a variety of cooperative arrangements and the resulting problems and successes.https://rese...
[Excerpt] The New Unity Partnership (NUP) has stirred up a firestorm of controversy in union circles...
[Excerpt] I am happy to comment on a provocative monograph that raises important issues for union po...
Cooperation, as it exists today in labor management relations, lets much to be desired. Although the...
[Excerpt] American history reflects a long cycle of trade union decline and growth. Analysts routine...
[Excerpt] The current environment presents dramatic challenges for the American labor movement. Stru...
In this article, Professor Schwab compares the union member-leader relationship to the corporate sha...