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Making Employment Rights Effective - Issues of Enforcement and Compliance (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,660
Discovery Miles 26 600
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Making Employment Rights Effective - Issues of Enforcement and Compliance (Hardcover, New)
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There has been an enormous expansion of individual employment
rights in Britain but their practical impact in terms of delivering
fairer workplaces can be questioned. Taking as its starting point
the widespread acknowledgement of problems with the major
enforcement mechanism, the Employment Tribunals, this collection
brings together experts from law, sociology and employment
relations to explore a range of alternative regulatory and
non-regulatory approaches to enforcement and to securing compliance
and to consider factors affecting variation in the extent to which
legal rights have meaning and impact at the workplace. Thus this
book addresses issues key to contemporary policy and academic
debate. Chapters discuss the growth in employment rights and their
enforcement mechanisms (Gillian Morris), problems with the
employment tribunal system and the current and potential role of
alternative dispute resolution (Linda Dickens); reflect on the long
experience of enforcement of equality rights (Bob Hepple) and
agency enforcement of health and safety legislation under the
'better regulation' agenda (Steve Tombs and David Whyte); evaluate
the potential of various 'reflexive law' mechanisms, including
corporate governance (Simon Deakin, Colm McLaughlin and Dominic
Chai), and of procurement (Christopher McCrudden) as strategies for
delivering fairness at the workplace. Factors influencing how
statutory rights shape workplace practice are illuminated further
in chapters on trade unions and individual legal rights (Trevor
Colling), the management of employment rights (John Purcell) and
regulation and small firms (Paul Edwards).The opening chapter
(Dickens) makes the case for addressing issues of enforcement and
compliance in terms of adverse treatment at work, while the final
chapter (Dickens) considers why successive governments have been
reluctant to act and outlines steps which might be taken - were
there sufficient political will to do so - to help make employment
rights effective in promoting fairer workplaces.
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