A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over from the Conservatives in Britain in 1997. This did not occur. Collective bargaining continued to retreat. The paper discusses the implications of the changing economic context for the government’s legal innovations, notably statutory trade union recognition and a minimum wage. It describes the consequences for industrial relations. It concludes that New Labour’s legacy may lie in its nurturing of the institutions of social partnership and the use of conciliation
For most of the twentieth century, collective bargaining provided the terms on which labour was comm...
At a time when the economic recession is more severe, and trade unions are weaker, than at any time ...
n this paper I consider the rapid decline in the unionization rate that has occurred in Britain sinc...
A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over from the ...
Abstract: A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over...
Abstract: A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over...
This paper investigates the demise of unionisation in British private sector workplaces over the las...
This report outlines and assesses the substantial shifts in both collective and individual employmen...
This paper addresses the question of whether there is, any longer, a distinctive Left form of indust...
Union membership rose by 100,000 in 1999 ending two decades of sustained membership losses û the lon...
This paper investigates the demise of unionisation in British private sector workplaces over the las...
What impact has the neoliberal policy implemented by Conservative governments in the United Kingdom ...
The institutions and conduct of British industrial relations changed fundamentally in the last decad...
Though the contemporary political situation is unfavourable, there has been a continuing and lively ...
Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World is the first book to provide readers with an authoritative and co...
For most of the twentieth century, collective bargaining provided the terms on which labour was comm...
At a time when the economic recession is more severe, and trade unions are weaker, than at any time ...
n this paper I consider the rapid decline in the unionization rate that has occurred in Britain sinc...
A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over from the ...
Abstract: A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over...
Abstract: A revival of trade unions was widely expected when Blair’s New Labour government took over...
This paper investigates the demise of unionisation in British private sector workplaces over the las...
This report outlines and assesses the substantial shifts in both collective and individual employmen...
This paper addresses the question of whether there is, any longer, a distinctive Left form of indust...
Union membership rose by 100,000 in 1999 ending two decades of sustained membership losses û the lon...
This paper investigates the demise of unionisation in British private sector workplaces over the las...
What impact has the neoliberal policy implemented by Conservative governments in the United Kingdom ...
The institutions and conduct of British industrial relations changed fundamentally in the last decad...
Though the contemporary political situation is unfavourable, there has been a continuing and lively ...
Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World is the first book to provide readers with an authoritative and co...
For most of the twentieth century, collective bargaining provided the terms on which labour was comm...
At a time when the economic recession is more severe, and trade unions are weaker, than at any time ...
n this paper I consider the rapid decline in the unionization rate that has occurred in Britain sinc...