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Articles 1 - 16 of 16
Full-Text Articles in Labor and Employment Law
The Divided Supreme Court, 1944-1945, C. Herman Pritchett
The Divided Supreme Court, 1944-1945, C. Herman Pritchett
Michigan Law Review
The United States Supreme Court has in recent years been supplying fascinating material for students interested in the interplay of personal and institutional factors in the judicial decision-making process. Contrary to the more restrictive practices of some other legal systems, the traditions of the American judiciary have never insisted that justices sitting en banc should hide the existence of division among themselves behind a facade of pretended unanimity. Justices who dissent from a decision of their brethren have been permitted to say so, and to give their reasons. This practice has had an immeasurably great effect in facilitating the growth …
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Michigan Law Review
The abstracts consist merely of summaries of the facts and holdings of recent cases and are distinguished from the notes by the absence of discussion.
Jurisdictional Disputes, Donald R. Colvin
Jurisdictional Disputes, Donald R. Colvin
Washington Law Review
To understand better the tremendous scope of this labyrinthical situation, the following hypothetical, but not usual case is posed: The employees of A are members of B union. They are satisfied with their hours, working conditions, and wages and there is no allegation of any unfair labor practices upon the part of A. C, a rival union, enters the field, contending that the employees should affiliate with it, and, in order to prosecute its point, either pickets A or instigates a boycott. If A's employees were to accede to C's demands, it is highly probable that B would take resort …
Labor Law-Elimination Of Businessmen-Workers As A Legitimate Union Objective, John Dobson
Labor Law-Elimination Of Businessmen-Workers As A Legitimate Union Objective, John Dobson
Michigan Law Review
For some seven or eight years before the commencement of their suit for injunction, plaintiffs had been jointly engaged in the business of distributing milk and milk products to retail dealers in a certain area. They performed all of their own labor, purchasing from wholesalers and making delivery to retail customers in their own trucks which they owned and individually operated. The defendants were the Milk Drivers and Dairy Employees Union, Local No. 93, and Paul Jones, its secretary-treasurer. Defendant union had entered into union shop contracts with about 95 per cent of the milk wholesalers in the area, whose …
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Michigan Law Review
The abstracts consist merely of summaries of the facts and holdings of recent cases and are distinguished from the notes by the absence of discussion.
Constitutional Law-Freedom Of Speech For Labor Organizers-Registration Requirement Invalid, Francis Powers
Constitutional Law-Freedom Of Speech For Labor Organizers-Registration Requirement Invalid, Francis Powers
Michigan Law Review
Collins v. Thomas decided by the Supreme Court in January is a decision of great practical importance in that it falls at a point where three recently developed constitutional doctrines enmesh or intersect with one another. The case makes it necessary that the Court integrate these doctrines and distinguish the areas in which they are respectively applicable.
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Michigan Law Review
The abstracts consist merely of summaries of the facts and holdings of recent cases and are distinguished from the notes by the absence of discussion.
Aspects Of Wage Stabilization By The National War Labor Board, David Haber
Aspects Of Wage Stabilization By The National War Labor Board, David Haber
Michigan Law Review
Most economists assume that behind an unrestricted war economy lurk the dangers of inflation. Although national income increases, so much of the country's productive effort is devoted to the manufacture of war goods that the number of articles available for civilian consumption necessarily diminishes. This gap between the available supply and the existing purchasing power has the effect of raising prices. Rising wages aggravate this situation because they increase production costs which are then passed on to the consumer in the form of higher prices, and because, by further increasing the purchasing power of the population, they increase the gap …
Coverage Of The Fair Labor Standards Act, Malcolm M. Davisson
Coverage Of The Fair Labor Standards Act, Malcolm M. Davisson
Michigan Law Review
The writer published an article dealing with the coverage of the Fair Labor Standards Act in the June, 1943 issue of the Michigan Law Review. It is the purpose of this paper to consider the most important decisions since the preparation of that article (March, 1943) and to examine the applicability of the act to certain activities not there discussed.
Abstracts, Katharine Loomis
Abstracts, Katharine Loomis
Michigan Law Review
The abstracts consist merely of summaries of the facts and holdings of recent cases and are distinguished from the notes by the absence of discussion.
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Abstracts, Mary Jane Plumer
Michigan Law Review
The abstracts consist merely of summaries of the facts and holdings of recent cases and are distinguished from the notes by the absence of discussion.
The Free Speech Safeguard For Labor Picketing: Part Two, Ira Schlusselberg
The Free Speech Safeguard For Labor Picketing: Part Two, Ira Schlusselberg
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Free Speech Safeguard For Labor Picketing: Part One, Ira Schlusselberg
The Free Speech Safeguard For Labor Picketing: Part One, Ira Schlusselberg
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Employer's Liability For Servant's Negligent Pedestrianism
Employer's Liability For Servant's Negligent Pedestrianism
Indiana Law Journal
Notes and Comments: Master and Servant
"Portal To Portal" Time Constitutes Work Under The Fair Labor Standard Act
"Portal To Portal" Time Constitutes Work Under The Fair Labor Standard Act
Indiana Law Journal
Notes and Comments: Master and Servant