While acknowledging the difficulties inherent in a comparative approach to labor and employment ordering issues, the author argues that our times and circumstances force us to consider such a perspective. This essay looks at some of the background and characteristics of the labor law regimes of the United States and Germany to reflect on where we have been and where we might be going. The author concludes that we stand at the edge of a new world, one that may well entail both a new culture of work and ways of being for all its inhabitants
The enormous success of the United States economy in producing new jobs has focused world-wide atten...
The heightened economic globalization of the last quarter century presents a welter of new questions...
Until very recently, one almost never heard mention of international issues among labor and employme...
While acknowledging the difficulties inherent in a comparative approach to labor and employment orde...
This essay muses on the relationship between law, labor organizing, politics, and the role of academ...
Labour law is in crisis. Global economic factors and the changing contours of work and workplace rel...
This Article uses a historical perspective as a basis to analyze the current state of labor and empl...
There is a serious problem with the labor and employment law system in the United States today. Unio...
Current labor law debates, in the United States and elsewhere, reflect entrenched discursive positio...
Labor law is failing. Disfigured by courts, attacked by employers, and rendered inapt by a global an...
This essay suggest that attempts to create a transnational regime of labour regulation have been fru...
In this lecture, I’m going to explain how and why I came to write my article, The Law of Economic Su...
This Essay is based on the 37th Annual Kenneth M. Piper Lecture. It offers a new perspective on the ...
This collection of essays is grounded in the notion that law is both a determinant and an expression...
Although Canada and the US have both adopted labor relations legal frameworks based on the Wagner mo...
The enormous success of the United States economy in producing new jobs has focused world-wide atten...
The heightened economic globalization of the last quarter century presents a welter of new questions...
Until very recently, one almost never heard mention of international issues among labor and employme...
While acknowledging the difficulties inherent in a comparative approach to labor and employment orde...
This essay muses on the relationship between law, labor organizing, politics, and the role of academ...
Labour law is in crisis. Global economic factors and the changing contours of work and workplace rel...
This Article uses a historical perspective as a basis to analyze the current state of labor and empl...
There is a serious problem with the labor and employment law system in the United States today. Unio...
Current labor law debates, in the United States and elsewhere, reflect entrenched discursive positio...
Labor law is failing. Disfigured by courts, attacked by employers, and rendered inapt by a global an...
This essay suggest that attempts to create a transnational regime of labour regulation have been fru...
In this lecture, I’m going to explain how and why I came to write my article, The Law of Economic Su...
This Essay is based on the 37th Annual Kenneth M. Piper Lecture. It offers a new perspective on the ...
This collection of essays is grounded in the notion that law is both a determinant and an expression...
Although Canada and the US have both adopted labor relations legal frameworks based on the Wagner mo...
The enormous success of the United States economy in producing new jobs has focused world-wide atten...
The heightened economic globalization of the last quarter century presents a welter of new questions...
Until very recently, one almost never heard mention of international issues among labor and employme...