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Deference Of Jurisdiction By The National Labor Relations Board And The Arbitration Clause, Alan C. Rosser
Deference Of Jurisdiction By The National Labor Relations Board And The Arbitration Clause, Alan C. Rosser
Vanderbilt Law Review
In 1935, when the Wagner Act was passed, arbitration was not used extensively as a method of settling labor disputes. Most parties to labor disputes relied on the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) or the courts as means of settlement, rather than binding themselves to the decision of an arbitrator.' Gradually, however, with the increased avail-ability of more skilled arbitrators and the acute awareness of the costs of outside solution, arbitration has become a highly popular method of settling labor disputes. It is estimated that 94 percent of all collective bargaining agreements now provide for arbitration of grievances not settled …
Subcontracting Arbitration: How The Issues Are Decided, Edwin H. Jacobs
Subcontracting Arbitration: How The Issues Are Decided, Edwin H. Jacobs
Cleveland State Law Review
The purpose of this paper is to determine what, if any, particular criteria are currently being used by arbitrators in deciding subcontracting controversies involving labor and management where a contract exists between the parties. The failure of traditional standards in the evaluation of subcontracting controversies has long been evident. The view here taken opposes those standards and indicates that there is a soundly based and readily analyzed common factor, available as a basis for the determination of these disputes.
Arbitration Of Right Of Employee To Self-Expression, Harold D. Smith
Arbitration Of Right Of Employee To Self-Expression, Harold D. Smith
Cleveland State Law Review
The conflicting interests dealt with by arbitration cases summarized in this paper involve management's right to direct an employee's behavior and the employee's right to retain control over his behavior. Many arbitrators attempt to balance these interests on the theory that (1) an individual's rights are modified to some extent when he voluntarily accepts those responsibilities which accompany his entering an employee relationship; and (2) a contractual right to discharge for just cause, does not equip the employer with an absolute right to direct the employee to do or not to do anything which the employer feels would promote the …
Labor Law - Successorship - Post-Transfer Viability Of The Bargaining Unit Forms A Sufficient Basis To Impose A Duty To Bargain Upon An Acquiring Employer Even Where The Absence Of Any Connection Between The Predecessor And Successor Precludes More Extensive Liability, Philip M. Cullen Iii
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Labor Law - Employee-Oriented Collective Bargaining Agreement In Insufficient Reason To Deny The Issuance Of A Boys Markets Injunction, J. Michael Fieglein
Labor Law - Employee-Oriented Collective Bargaining Agreement In Insufficient Reason To Deny The Issuance Of A Boys Markets Injunction, J. Michael Fieglein
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.