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Title: Voices at Work: Continuity and Change in the Common Law World
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Voices at Work: Continuity and Change in the Common Law World
Product Details:
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Language: English
Dimensions: 25.00 X 4.00 X 18.00
Publisher Code: 9780199683130
Date Added: 2018-08-10
Search Category: International
Jurisdiction: International
Overview:
This edited collection is the culmination of a comparative project on 'Voices at Work' funded by the Leverhulme Trust 2010 - 2013. The book aims to shed light on the problematic concept of worker 'voice' by tracking its evolution and its complex interactions with various forms of law. Contributors to the volume identify the scope for continuity of legal approaches to voice and the potential for change in a sample of industrialised English speaking common law
countries, namely Australia, Canada, New Zealand, UK, and USA. These countries, facing broadly similar regulatory dilemmas, have often sought to borrow and adapt certain legal mechanisms from one another. The variance in the outcomes of any attempts at 'borrowing' seems to demonstrate that, despite apparent
membership of a 'common law' family, there are significant differences between industrial systems and constitutional traditions, thereby casting doubt on the notion that there are definitive legal solutions which can be applied through transplantation. Instead, it seems worth studying the diverse possibilities for worker voice offered in divergent contexts, not only through traditional forms of labour law, but also such disciplines as competition law, human rights law, international law and
public law. In this way, the comparative study highlights a rich multiplicity of institutions and locations of worker voice, configured in a variety of ways across the English-speaking common law world.
This book comprises contributions from many leading scholars of labour law, politics and industrial relations drawn from across the jurisdictions, and is therefore an exceedingly comprehensive comparative study. It is addressed to academics, policymakers, legal practitioners, legislative drafters, trade unions and interest groups alike. Additionally, while offering a critique of existing laws, this book proposes alternative legal tools to promote engagement with a multitude of 'voices' at work
and therefore foster the effective deployment of law in industrial relations.
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Table Of Contents:
INTRODUCTION: THEORIZING VOICE ; IDENTITIES OF VOICE ; INSTITUTIONS OF VOICE ; LOCATIONS OF VOICE ; BEING HEARD-OBSTRUCTING AND FACILITATING VOICE