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Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Commentary: Organized Professionals Can Be Effective Producers, Robert M. Tobias Jun 2004

Commentary: Organized Professionals Can Be Effective Producers, Robert M. Tobias

Chicago-Kent Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Transformation Of The Professional Workforce, Marion Crain Jun 2004

The Transformation Of The Professional Workforce, Marion Crain

Chicago-Kent Law Review

For professionals, work is not a commodity to be sold on the market, but a calling that constitutes personal identity while simultaneously conferring a relatively privileged class status. Historically, the professions avoided commodification through a social bargain in which they exchanged their professional expertise and dedication to public service for autonomy, the ability to self-regulate through peer review, and monopoly power over their knowledge base. Over the last twenty-five years, market instability and technological development have fundamentally altered the conditions under which this social bargain was formed, and the professional class has been transformed from self-employed to salaried employee status. …


Graduate Assistants At The Bargaining Table, But For How Long?, Stephen L. Ukeiley Jan 2004

Graduate Assistants At The Bargaining Table, But For How Long?, Stephen L. Ukeiley

Hofstra Labor & Employment Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Religious Organizations And Mandatory Collective Bargaining Under Federal And State Labor Laws: Freedom From And Freedom For, Kathleen A. Brady Jan 2004

Religious Organizations And Mandatory Collective Bargaining Under Federal And State Labor Laws: Freedom From And Freedom For, Kathleen A. Brady

Villanova Law Review

No abstract provided.