This article was prepared for a symposium at Indiana University Maurer School of Law on Labor and Employment Law under the Obama Administration. The article analyzes the current spate of attacks on public employees with particular reference to three sub-topics: teacher tenure and evaluation “reform,” the periodic cycles of public sector fiscal crises, and the unilateral modification of public sector collective bargaining agreements. The article concludes with the assessment that cyclical attacks on public sector workers reflect a skewed viewpoint that public employees owe first-class obligations but possess only second-class rights
This article argues that the best interest of the public is served when at least some public employe...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
This paper discusses and analyses the current evolution of the exceptional employment law rules gove...
This article was prepared for a symposium at Indiana University Maurer School of Law on Labor and Em...
Beginning in December 2010, a virtual tsunami of legislative change hit public sector labor law. The...
Labor and Employment Law Under the Obama Administration: A Time for Hope and Change? Symposium held ...
This Comment will encompass three topics: First, governmental services are increasingly interrupted ...
In a society which demands constantly increased services from its government, work stoppages in the ...
This article, part of a symposium on the history of various areas of labor and employment law, gives...
The beginning of the second decade of the 21st century saw renewed attacks on public employee collec...
In this Essay, Professors Ann McGinley and Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt introduce the important issues to ...
The attacks on public-sector union rights in the United States that began in 2011 are one of the mos...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
In public employment there has been an increasing resort to strikes in all parts of the nation by em...
This Article analyzes the law of and experience with the statutory right to strike in the public sec...
This article argues that the best interest of the public is served when at least some public employe...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
This paper discusses and analyses the current evolution of the exceptional employment law rules gove...
This article was prepared for a symposium at Indiana University Maurer School of Law on Labor and Em...
Beginning in December 2010, a virtual tsunami of legislative change hit public sector labor law. The...
Labor and Employment Law Under the Obama Administration: A Time for Hope and Change? Symposium held ...
This Comment will encompass three topics: First, governmental services are increasingly interrupted ...
In a society which demands constantly increased services from its government, work stoppages in the ...
This article, part of a symposium on the history of various areas of labor and employment law, gives...
The beginning of the second decade of the 21st century saw renewed attacks on public employee collec...
In this Essay, Professors Ann McGinley and Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt introduce the important issues to ...
The attacks on public-sector union rights in the United States that began in 2011 are one of the mos...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
In public employment there has been an increasing resort to strikes in all parts of the nation by em...
This Article analyzes the law of and experience with the statutory right to strike in the public sec...
This article argues that the best interest of the public is served when at least some public employe...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
This paper discusses and analyses the current evolution of the exceptional employment law rules gove...