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Employment Discrimination And Labor Arbitrators: A Question Of Competence, Anthony F. Bartlett Pace University School Of Law
Employment Discrimination And Labor Arbitrators: A Question Of Competence, Anthony F. Bartlett Pace University School Of Law
West Virginia Law Review
During the Second World War labor arbitration came to prominence in the United States as an important means of resolving disputes between labor and management. In the post-War years it gradually achieved a pre-eminent position in the American collective bargaining system, finally acquiring the imprimatur of the Supreme Court in 1960. Crucial to the Court's rationale for requiring virtual judicial abstension in regard to labor arbitration was its perception of the arbitration process as an informal and flexible system manned by arbitrators who were in possession of a high level of competence in the realities of labor relations. This view …
Grievance Mediation: A Step Towards Peace In The Bituminous Coal Industry, Stephen B. Goldberg
Grievance Mediation: A Step Towards Peace In The Bituminous Coal Industry, Stephen B. Goldberg
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.