Cornell University Press

EMPLOYMENT DISPUTE RESOLUTION AND WORKER RIGHTS IN THE CHANGING WORKPLACE
Adrienne E. Eaton (Editor); Jeffrey H. Keefe (Editor)

An ILR Press Book
LERA Research Volume

$27.95s paper
2000, 305 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2
ISBN: 978-0-913447-77-2  Quantity



"Selected as a noteworthy book in Selected References, No. 291, Industrial Relations Section, Princeton University. July, 2000."


Have the speed, informality, and low cost of the grievance and arbitration system deteriorated? Has the system become too adversarial? Has it lost its problem-solving character? This book examines the nature and degree of change in workplace dispute resolution in the context of ongoing changes in work and in labor relations.

The volume begins with an editors’ introduction that provides context and offers a political perspective on the current state of dispute resolution in the workplace. The chapters that follow contain critiques of the existing legal framework surrounding mandatory arbitration in the nonunion sector and a review of the empirical literature on nonunion dispute resolution. Employment Dispute Resolution and Worker Rights in the Changing Workplace includes sections on grievance mediation, the status of the grievance procedure in workplaces with extensive worker and/or union participation in decision making, and high-performance workplaces. The study concludes with trends in dispute resolution in the public sector and with the alternative dispute resolution system commonly practiced in the unionized construction industry.

Contributors
Lisa B. Bingham, Indiana University
Denise R. Chachere, St. Louis University
Peter Feuille, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Heather Grob, Center to Protect Workers’ Rights
Michelle Kaminski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jill K. Kriesky, West Virginia University
David Lewin, University of California, Los Angeles
Katherine Stone, Cornell University Law School
Arnold M. Zack, Arbitrator

Reviews

"This survey of dispute resolution in the contemporary workplace will be useful to teachers of grievance procedures who pass knowledge on to union activists."--Albert Vetere Lannon, Laney College. Labor Studies Journal, Vol. 26, No. 3, Fall 2001

About the Author

Adrienne E. Eaton and Jeffrey H. Keefe are both Associate Professors in the Labor Studies and Employment Relations Department at Rutgers University.

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