The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered considerable attention, much of it surrounding the proposed Employee Free Choice Act. The proposed legislation seeks to amend the National Labor Relations Act by requiring employers to recognize a union when the employer is presented with evidence of majority support for union recognition via card checks. Despite this recent interest in card checks, there is little empirical research on the topic due, in part, to the lack of available data. Although card-check organizing in the private sector is not rare, such organizing is voluntary, and does not require government approval. Thus, there is little data chronicling the frequency of such events. However, card-check...
A great debate has been brewing for years over whether unions should be able to organize employees o...
The author estimates the impact of compulsory election laws on certification success using data on o...
There is abundant evidence of a significant and widening gap in union growth rates in the United Sta...
The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered considerable attentio...
The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered a lot of attention, m...
The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered a lot of attention, m...
Card-check laws, which have been unsuccessfully pursued by private-sector unions, mandate that emplo...
We examine the impact of state card-check legislation on public-sector union membership. Based on an...
A significant policy debate has been occurring regarding union organizing methods in the United Stat...
The authors evaluate policy arguments for and against the use of card check as a method to determine...
The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (NLRA) gives private sector workers the right to join or fo...
The rise of neutrality agreements is a major development in labor-management relations in this count...
Summer 2006 saw multiple negotiations between the big-city hotel operators and UNITE HERE, the union...
In the American system of labor relations, unions may only represent employees in collective bargain...
The secret-ballot election is the National Labor Relations Board’s preferred method for employees to...
A great debate has been brewing for years over whether unions should be able to organize employees o...
The author estimates the impact of compulsory election laws on certification success using data on o...
There is abundant evidence of a significant and widening gap in union growth rates in the United Sta...
The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered considerable attentio...
The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered a lot of attention, m...
The use of “card checks” as a method of union organizing has recently garnered a lot of attention, m...
Card-check laws, which have been unsuccessfully pursued by private-sector unions, mandate that emplo...
We examine the impact of state card-check legislation on public-sector union membership. Based on an...
A significant policy debate has been occurring regarding union organizing methods in the United Stat...
The authors evaluate policy arguments for and against the use of card check as a method to determine...
The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (NLRA) gives private sector workers the right to join or fo...
The rise of neutrality agreements is a major development in labor-management relations in this count...
Summer 2006 saw multiple negotiations between the big-city hotel operators and UNITE HERE, the union...
In the American system of labor relations, unions may only represent employees in collective bargain...
The secret-ballot election is the National Labor Relations Board’s preferred method for employees to...
A great debate has been brewing for years over whether unions should be able to organize employees o...
The author estimates the impact of compulsory election laws on certification success using data on o...
There is abundant evidence of a significant and widening gap in union growth rates in the United Sta...