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Alastair Michal Smith – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
Higher Education staff in the United Kingdom (UK) work long hours to complete their duties. In a 2021 survey, staff reported a weekly average of 51 hours: a fact well understood to undermine health and educational quality. Yet, UK law sets a maximum working week of 48 hours, and failure to uphold this maximum is a criminal offence for employers.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, School Personnel, Unions
Ambash, Joseph W. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2016
The recent decision by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in the "Columbia University"case granting students who serve as teaching or research assistants at private universities the right to unionize dealt a major blow to private higher education as we know it. In a long-anticipated decision, the NLRB ruled that any student who…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Federal Legislation, Labor Legislation, Unions
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Rachleff, Peter – Thought & Action, 2017
Over the course of the 1980s and 1990s, the contours of neoliberalism took shape, as individual corporations implemented new strategies seeking to shift the frontier of control in their favor and increase their profits. Their actions began to shape the political and economic practices of both major political parties, and the orientation of…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Labor Problems, Labor Relations, Labor
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Warren, Cat – Academe, 2010
This article presents an interview with Wilma B. Liebman, the new chair of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). In this interview, Liebman talks about labor law, academics, and reversing ossification.
Descriptors: Labor Legislation, Labor Relations, Labor, Interviews
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Kim, Joon K. – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2012
During the interwar period, California's labor-intensive agriculture transitioned from reliance on diverse immigrants to preference for Mexicans. Political movements to restrict immigration, the Great Depression, and labor unrest compelled farm employers to search for labor that could be used flexibly and deported easily. To achieve this…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Agriculture, Agricultural Laborers, Foreign Countries
Cavanagh, Sean – Education Week, 2011
Massive protests have been the norm in Wisconsin, since Gov. Scott Walker unveiled a plan to strip many collective bargaining rights from teachers and most other public employees. GOP elected officials are pursuing similar measures in Ohio and other states. But in the DeForest district, like some others around the state, collective bargaining,…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Problems, Grievance Procedures
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Minor, Darrell – Thought & Action, 2012
On February 1, 2012, Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels signed a "right to work" (RTW) provision in the state's labor laws, making Indiana the 23rd RTW state in the nation. In addition to becoming the 23rd RTW state in the nation, Indiana is the first in more than a decade to pass a law undermining the ability of unions to organize and…
Descriptors: Public Health, Living Standards, Unions, Collective Bargaining
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Genova, Gina L. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2010
The 20th-century office is dead. According to "Telework Trendlines 2009," WorldatWork's new survey of more than 1,000 U.S. adults, the number of Americans working remotely at least once a month jumped 39%, from 12.4 million in 2006 to 17.2 million in 2008. Last year Congress even introduced bills that would encourage and expand telework programs…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Teleworking, Employees, Courts
Spanbauer, Julie M. – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2009
There has been a gradual increase at U.S. universities and colleges in the appointment of women to full time faculty positions with women currently comprising approximately 40% of full time faculty. When status, job security, and institutional affiliation are taken into account, the percentage drops significantly: Women occupy only 24% of tenured…
Descriptors: Universities, Females, Disproportionate Representation, Faculty
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Gregory, Gordon A.; Heinen, Mark – Journal of Law and Education, 1991
In the Fall 1989 issue, Caraway discussed the advantages of grievance mediation, compared with arbitration. This article reexamines the issue from the viewpoint of the individual grievant and points to recent conflicting developments in the National Labor Relations Board's deferral doctrine. An introduction by Perry A. Zirkel summarizes the…
Descriptors: Arbitration, Collective Bargaining, Employer Employee Relationship, Grievance Procedures
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Sockell, Donna – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1984
Focuses on the legal status of employee-participation programs, such as quality circles, that coexist with but are not controlled by unions. Suggests changes in public policy to protect participation programs that do not threaten the bargaining agent. (JOW)
Descriptors: Compliance (Legal), Employer Employee Relationship, Labor Legislation, Participative Decision Making
McHugh, William F. – Coll Univ Bus, 1970
The National Labor Relations Board asserted jurisdiction over nonprofit colleges and universities in a landmark decision involving Syracuse and Cornell Universities, which will now permit collective negotiations where jurisdictional standards are met by employes, including faculty. (Author/Editor)
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Employer Employee Relationship, Higher Education, Labor Legislation
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Muhl, Charles J. – Monthly Labor Review, 2002
In a legal context, the classification of a worker as either an employee or an independent contractor can have significant consequences. Classification can vary depending on which test is used: common law, economic realities, or hybrid. (Contains 34 notes and references.) (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Classification, Employees, Employer Employee Relationship, Federal Legislation
Block, Richard N.; And Others – 1996
This book uses the testimony given before the Commission on the Future of Worker-Management Relations to gain insight into the state of industrial relations and labor law in the United States. The book is organized in five chapters. The first chapter looks at the history of labor movements and labor legislation in the United States. Chapter 2…
Descriptors: Economic Change, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Practices, Labor Legislation
Spritzer, Allan D., Comp. – 1972
Concern over the problems of labor-management relations in the public sector has generated considerable interest and concern in recent years among faculty and students as well as government employers and employees throughout the nation. Thus the Manpower and Industrial Relations Institute of the University of Alabama decided to issue a series of…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Collective Bargaining, Employer Employee Relationship, Higher Education
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