Labour Legislation and Public Policy: A Contemporary History

Subjects:
Employment Law
Contents:
1. Collective Laissez-faire
2. Full Employment and the Post-war Consensus 1945-1951
3. The Easy Decade 1951-1961
4. Modernization and Experiments with Planning 1961-1970
5. Industrial Justice and the Individual Worker 1968-1971
6. The End of Agreement: Collective Labour Law 1965-1974
7. The Social Contract 1974-1979
8. Reducing the Power of Trade Unions 1979-1990
9. Restructuring the Labour Economy 1979-1990
Conclusion - A Post-war Perspective

ISBN13: 9780198760603
ISBN: 0198760604
Published: May 1993
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Hardback
Price: £60.00

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In this path-breaking work, the authors seek to offer students a fresh way of looking at modern labour law. By taking as their starting point the idea that labour law, having once been governed by common law rules, is now overwhelmingly regulated by statute, the authors show that labour law can only be studied properly by understanding the legislation behind it.

They then proceed to lead the student to an understanding of how and why the legislation came to be enacted. They therefore examine, in chronological order, the history and political context of every major piece of labour legislation from 1945 up to and including the momentous changes of the Thatcher years. Guiding the reader through four and a half decades of almost continuous legislative activity, the authors successfully demonstrate how the law was created and why it looks as it does today. No other textbook on this subject takes this approach.