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Contract plays a vitally important role in the delivery of public
services today. Both central and local governments make extensive
use of private firms to provide facilities, goods, and services.
Government contracts vary considerably from the relatively
straightforward competitive procurement of office supplies, to
complex, long-term arrangements in which the contractor researches
and develops a new piece of military equipment, or builds and
provides a fully-serviced hospital over a thirty-year period.
English law's traditional approach to government contracts has
been to regard them as ordinary private law arrangements. As a
result, they have understandably been neglected by public lawyers
in both teaching and research. This book argues that, on closer
inspection, constitutional and administrative law (in the form of
statute, common law, and government guidance) have been playing an
increasingly important role in the regulation of certain key
aspects of government contracting. The book analyzes these public
law elements in detail and suggests ways in which they might
appropriately be developed more fully, in tandem with the
underlying private law regime. The book's aim is to raise the
profile of government contracts as a proper subject for public law
scholarship, whilst at the same time contributing to important
contemporary debates on issues such as the public vs. private
divide, the scope of the judicial review jurisdiction, and the
reach of the Human Rights Act 1998.
This book features essays by leading legal scholars on 'landmark'
labour law cases from the mid-19th century to the present day. The
essays are acutely sensitive to the historical and theoretical
context of each case, and the volume provides original and
sometimes startling new perspectives on some familiar friends.
There are few activities as distinctively human as work and labour.
The book traces the development of labour law through the social
struggles and economic conflicts between workers, trade unions, and
employers. The narrative arc of its landmark cases reveals the
richness and complexity of the human story played out in the
working lives of real people. It also charts the remarkable
transformation of the constitutional role of courts in labour law,
from instruments of class oppression to the vindication of workers'
fundamental rights at work. The collection will be of interest to
students, scholars, and legal practitioners in labour and equality
law, as well as students in management studies, industrial
relations, and labour history.
Written by an eminent employment law scholar, this exciting new
textbook offers a comprehensive introduction to individual and
collective employment law principles.
To what extent is labour law an autonomous field of study? This
book is based upon the papers written by a group of leading
international scholars on this theme, delivered at a conference to
mark Professor Mark Freedland's retirement from his teaching
fellowship in Oxford. The chapters explore the boundaries and
connections between labour law and other legal disciplines such as
company law, competition law, contract law and public law; labour
law and legal methodologies such as reflexive governance and
comparative law; and labour law and other disciplines such as
ethics, economics and political philosophy. In so doing, it
represents a cross-section of the most sophisticated current work
at the cutting edge of labour law theory.
Policy discussions play an important role in labour law, and labour
lawyers draw on a wide range of disciplines and approaches in order
to construct their arguments. This 2009 overview of the basic
principles of labour law and the related policy arguments
introduces two of the main perspectives used in the analysis of
labour law today human rights and economics. It offers a brief
history of the influence of human rights and economics on labour
law since the 1950s, explains neoclassical and new institutional
economics and summarises the historical development of
international human rights law. The insights of rights theorists
and economists are then applied to a selection of topics in labour
law, including anti-discrimination law, dismissal, working time,
pay, consultation and collective bargaining, trade union membership
and industrial action, in order to demonstrate the interplay
between the two perspectives.
Policy discussions play an important role in labour law, and labour
lawyers draw on a wide range of disciplines and approaches in order
to construct their arguments. This 2009 overview of the basic
principles of labour law and the related policy arguments
introduces two of the main perspectives used in the analysis of
labour law today human rights and economics. It offers a brief
history of the influence of human rights and economics on labour
law since the 1950s, explains neoclassical and new institutional
economics and summarises the historical development of
international human rights law. The insights of rights theorists
and economists are then applied to a selection of topics in labour
law, including anti-discrimination law, dismissal, working time,
pay, consultation and collective bargaining, trade union membership
and industrial action, in order to demonstrate the interplay
between the two perspectives.
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Landmark Cases in Labour Law
Jeremias Adams-Prassl, Paul Mitchell, Alan Bogg, A.C.L. Davies
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R1,869
Discovery Miles 18 690
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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To what extent is labour law an autonomous field of study? This
book is based upon the papers written by a group of leading
international scholars on this theme, delivered at a conference to
mark Professor Mark Freedland's retirement from his teaching
fellowship in Oxford. The chapters explore the boundaries and
connections between labour law and other legal disciplines such as
company law, competition law, contract law and public law; labour
law and legal methodologies such as reflexive governance and
comparative law; and labour law and other disciplines such as
ethics, economics and political philosophy. In so doing, it
represents a cross-section of the most sophisticated current work
at the cutting edge of labour law theory.
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