The author investigates factors influencing the adoption of dispute resolution procedures in the nonunion workplace. Various explanations are tested using data from a 1998 survey of dispute resolution procedures in the telecommunications industry. The results suggest that both institutional pressures and human resource strategies are factors driving the adoption of nonunion procedures. Among institutional factors, rising individual employment rights litigation and expanded court deferral to nonunion arbitration have led to increased adoption of mandatory arbitration procedures in the nonunion workplace. At the same time, an older institutional factor—union substitution by nonunion employers aimed at avoiding union organizing—continues to i...
Many debates surround systems for resolving workplace disputes. In the United States, traditional un...
In this paper we develop the argument that a firm’s ADR strategies are likely to be associated with ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The author investigates factors influencing the adoption of dispute resolu-tion procedures in the no...
The author investigates factors influencing the adoption of dispute resolution procedures in the non...
This study examines the impact on grievance rates of variation in the structure of nonunion dispute ...
[Excerpt] This paper investigates the adoption, structure, and function of dispute resolution proced...
Many debates surround systems for resolving workplace disputes. In the United States, traditional un...
For the past seven years, the authors of this paper have been conducting research on the use of Alte...
The U.S. industrial relations system has undergone a historic transformation over the past three dec...
From the beginning of the "silent ADR revolution" in the 1970s, conflict management scholars have im...
[Excerpt] For more than a decade a "quiet revolution" has been occurring m the American system of ju...
[Excerpt] Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) encompasses a range of procedures, such as mediation,...
Thank you for downloading an article from DigitalCommons@ILR. Support this valuable resource today! ...
Abstract: Three dilemmas emerging from the critical literature on alternative dispute resolution (AD...
Many debates surround systems for resolving workplace disputes. In the United States, traditional un...
In this paper we develop the argument that a firm’s ADR strategies are likely to be associated with ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The author investigates factors influencing the adoption of dispute resolu-tion procedures in the no...
The author investigates factors influencing the adoption of dispute resolution procedures in the non...
This study examines the impact on grievance rates of variation in the structure of nonunion dispute ...
[Excerpt] This paper investigates the adoption, structure, and function of dispute resolution proced...
Many debates surround systems for resolving workplace disputes. In the United States, traditional un...
For the past seven years, the authors of this paper have been conducting research on the use of Alte...
The U.S. industrial relations system has undergone a historic transformation over the past three dec...
From the beginning of the "silent ADR revolution" in the 1970s, conflict management scholars have im...
[Excerpt] For more than a decade a "quiet revolution" has been occurring m the American system of ju...
[Excerpt] Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) encompasses a range of procedures, such as mediation,...
Thank you for downloading an article from DigitalCommons@ILR. Support this valuable resource today! ...
Abstract: Three dilemmas emerging from the critical literature on alternative dispute resolution (AD...
Many debates surround systems for resolving workplace disputes. In the United States, traditional un...
In this paper we develop the argument that a firm’s ADR strategies are likely to be associated with ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio