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Exploring Voluntary Arbitration Of Individual Employment Disputes, Alfred W. Blumrosen
Exploring Voluntary Arbitration Of Individual Employment Disputes, Alfred W. Blumrosen
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
This Article outlines an arbitration process which may be employed in individual employment contracts to achieve a fair disposition of disputes, with the maximum finality for an arbitration decision which is consistent with legal principles. Where finality is not possible, arbitration would be a condition precedent to formal legal processes. To assure fairness in the process, the employer would agree to pay the arbitrator's fee and the employee's attorney fees incurred in connection with the arbitration.
Reforming At-Will Employment Law: A Model Statute, Liana Gioia, Per Ramford
Reforming At-Will Employment Law: A Model Statute, Liana Gioia, Per Ramford
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
Effective relief for at-will employees can only be achieved through statutory reform. Although specific legislation has been proposed on the federal
International Legal Research: An Infinite Paper Chase, Adolf Sprudzs
International Legal Research: An Infinite Paper Chase, Adolf Sprudzs
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
International legal research operates in the contemporary reality of an increasingly interdependent, complex world in which constant change is the order of the day. Not only are the numbers of international actors on the world stage changing (from 51 original members of the United Nations in 1945 to 157 United Nations member-states in 1982), but also changing are the concepts and methods of international law-making, as well as perceptions of the nature and sources of international law. The tremendous growth in the number of new states and international organizations has been accompanied by a corresponding expansion in world trade, international …
Court-Annexed Arbitration, A. Leo Levin
Court-Annexed Arbitration, A. Leo Levin
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
Court-annexed arbitration is utilized more extensively today than ever before. It commands widespread and increasing interest, not only because it serves the litigants well, but also because it offers to beleaguered courts a measure of relief from seriously overburdened dockets. This Article examines the use of court-annexed arbitration as an alternative method of dispute resolution. Part I describes how court-annexed arbitration works and the goals it is designed to achieve. Part II focuses on what the actual experience with court-annexed arbitration has been. Utilizing data from a recent empirical study on court-annexed arbitration by the Federal Judicial Center, this section …
The Non-Delegation Doctrine And Massachusetts Public Employee Grievance Arbitration, Scott C. Thompson
The Non-Delegation Doctrine And Massachusetts Public Employee Grievance Arbitration, Scott C. Thompson
Western New England Law Review
No abstract provided.
Court-Annexed Arbitration In The Federal Courts: The Philadelphia Story, Paul Nejelski, Andrew S. Zeldin
Court-Annexed Arbitration In The Federal Courts: The Philadelphia Story, Paul Nejelski, Andrew S. Zeldin
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.