A History of British Labour Law: 1867-1945Bloomsbury Publishing, 17. sep. 2003 - 266 strani In the UK the received wisdom has tended to be that,historically, British labour law was abstentionist or non-interventionist, best epitomised by the words of Lord Wedderburn who has written that '...collective bargaining has developed in a system which depends very little on the law, which is covered by very few decisions of the judges, and which is controlled by statute very little, if at all.'. It is not until we reach the Industrial Relations Act 1971 that we discover the first attempt in peacetime to move to a legally regulated system. However, the accuracy of this non-interventionist depiction appears to very much depend on the period which is examined, which is why an historical perspective is needed in order to understand the significance of the current shape and scope of British labour law. The aim of this work is to re-examine the received interpretation by looking at both the role given to law, and that anticipated and argued for it, during the most formative period of its development, the period between 1867 and 1945. The book also revisits the debate about war-time legislation which has tended to be viewed as standing apart from mainstream labour law but which the author demonstrates to have important linkages to the past and present. |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 37
Stran 3
... believed that the State should accord to them bare legal recognition under the condition of ample publicity . They would thus be secured against robbery and enabled to protect their prop- erty , but would have no other assistance in ...
... believed that the State should accord to them bare legal recognition under the condition of ample publicity . They would thus be secured against robbery and enabled to protect their prop- erty , but would have no other assistance in ...
Stran 5
... believed that such incidents could and should be dealt with by the general criminal law . In conse- quence , there was no need for specific legislative provision on picket- ing . Moreover , any such legislation would be unfair since ...
... believed that such incidents could and should be dealt with by the general criminal law . In conse- quence , there was no need for specific legislative provision on picket- ing . Moreover , any such legislation would be unfair since ...
Stran 7
... Report discuss the Council of Conciliation Act 1867 . The Act enabled employers and employees to jointly apply for a licence to form an The Government believed that industrial relations would be improved by Labour Law 1867–1880 7.
... Report discuss the Council of Conciliation Act 1867 . The Act enabled employers and employees to jointly apply for a licence to form an The Government believed that industrial relations would be improved by Labour Law 1867–1880 7.
Stran 8
... believed that it is expedient to declare that whilst all combinations of workmen untainted with a criminal purpose are lawful , certain agreements to be defined , will not be directly enforceable at Law . . .25 A particular concern was ...
... believed that it is expedient to declare that whilst all combinations of workmen untainted with a criminal purpose are lawful , certain agreements to be defined , will not be directly enforceable at Law . . .25 A particular concern was ...
Stran 12
... believed that he had in view a collective agreement between an employers ' association and a workers ' trade union . This may be first deduced from the fact that multi - party bargaining was not very com- mon in the seventies . If the ...
... believed that he had in view a collective agreement between an employers ' association and a workers ' trade union . This may be first deduced from the fact that multi - party bargaining was not very com- mon in the seventies . If the ...
Vsebina
1 | |
27 | |
3 19001914 | 63 |
4 Responding to Taff Vale | 87 |
5 The Impact of War 191418 | 119 |
6 The Aftermath of War 191821 | 149 |
7 Labour Law Between the Wars | 183 |
8 The Impact of the Second World War | 223 |
9 Concluding Remarks | 249 |
Index | 257 |
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Amendment appears award Bevin Bill Board of Trade clause collective agreements collective bargaining collectively agreed Committee common law common rule compulsory arbitration concerned conciliation conditions of employment conspiracy contract Court criminal decision dilution employed employers enactment establishment existed extent Fair Wages Resolution favour Government House of Lords Ibid immunity industrial action Industrial Councils industrial relations intervention involved issue JICs joint regulation labour law labour movement laissez-faire leaving certificates legal regulation legally enforceable legislation liability London Lord machinery matters ment Minister Ministry of Labour Ministry of Munitions Minority Report Moreover Munitions nationalisation OHMM organisation Parl Parliament parties period person picketing proposals question railway rate of wages recommendation restrict role Royal Commission scheme settlement sides of industry sought statutory Taff Vale terms and conditions tion trade boards trade dispute trade union trade unionists wartime Whilst Whitley workers workmen