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Bargaining For Job Safety and Health (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R927
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Bargaining For Job Safety and Health (Paperback, New Ed)
Series: The MIT Press
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Assessing the role of government regulation in occupational safety
issues. In 1977, a grain elevator explosion in Westwego, Louisiana,
took the lives of thirty-five workers. The next year, fifty-one men
who were working on cooling tower for a West Viginia power plant
died when their support scaffolding collapsed. And more recently, a
Senate subcommittee hearing revealed that the incidence of lung
cancer among uranium miners is nearly four times the national
average rate for men of the same age. Clearly, as Lawrence Bacow
writes in this book, occupational safety and health is a big
problem that may be getting bigger.What can be done about it? This
book argues that OSHA is not up to the task. Most accidents are
caused by hazards that are unique to individual firms. A single
regulatory authority like OSHA cannot be everywhere at once; it
lacks the resources needed to ferret out firm-specific hazards and
to ensure day-to-day compliance with health and safety regulations.
If government is to make the workplace safe, it must enlist the
help of the parties that have the greatest influence over safety
and health on the job-labor and management.Bargaining for Job
Safety and Health examines how labor and management work together
and against each other to abate occupational hazards. It describes
OSHA's influence, both positive and negative, over collective
bargaining on health and safety issues. Through a series of case
studies in develops a theory to explain why some unions are more
aggressive than others in pursuing health and safety objectives.
The book also outlines strategies that OSHA might take to encourage
labor and management to assume a larger role in curbing job hazards
through collective bargaining. Although it focuses on job safety
and health, this book draws a number of very interesting parallels
between OSHA and other types of regulatory programs. It should
interest a wide audience, including labor and management officials,
health and safety professionals, policymakers, labor relations
scholars, and others interested in regulatory reform and program
design.
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