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The Democratic Aspects of Trade Union Recognition (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R3,481
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The Democratic Aspects of Trade Union Recognition (Hardcover, New)
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Winner of the SLS Peter Birks Prize for Outstanding Legal
Scholarship 2010. The long ascendancy of pluralism and 'collective
laissez-faire' as a guiding ideology of British labour law was
emphatically shattered by the New Right ideology of Thatcher and
Major. When New Labour was finally returned to power in 1997, it
did not, however, attempt to resurrect the pre-Thatcher preference
for pluralist non-intervention in collective industrial relations.
Instead, it purported to follow a 'Third Way'. A centrepiece of
this new approach was the statutory recognition provision,
introduced in Schedule A1 TULRCA 1992. By breaking with the
tradition of voluntarism in respect of recognition of trade unions,
New Labour sought to provide a model of collective labour law which
combined legal support with control through juridification. A
closer study of both the history of approaches to recognition and
the current provisions opens up fundamental questions as to the
nature of this new model and the ones it aimed to replace. This
book uses political philosophy to elucidate the character of those
historical approaches and the nature of the 'Third Way' itself in
relation to statutory union recognition. In particular, it traces
the progressive eclipse of civic republican values in labour law,
in preference for a liberal political philosophy. The book
articulates and defends a civic republican philosophy in terms of
freedom as non-domination, the intrinsic value of democratic
participation through deliberative democracy, and community. This
can be contrasted with the rights-based individualism and State
neutrality characteristic of the liberal approach. Despite the
promise of civic community in the 'Third Way' rhetoric, this book
demonstrates that the reality of New Labour's experiment in union
recognition was an emphatic reassertion of liberalism in the sphere
of workers' collective rights. This is the first monograph to offer
a sustained critical analysis of legal approaches to trade union
recognition. It will be of particular interest to labour lawyers,
but also a wider audience of scholars in political philosophy and
industrial relations.
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