1st Edition

An Introduction to Industrial Relations

By Michael P. Jackson Copyright 1991
    410 Pages
    by Routledge

    An Introduction to Industrial Relations (1991) analyses various theoretical approaches to industrial relations, and summarises the origins and development of the subject. It looks at the impact of legislative changes, technological developments and the growing currency of ‘human resource management’ theories. The book offers a comparative approach, making extensive use of material from outside the UK, notably from America, Europe and the Pacific Rim, and examines the implications of EEC legislation for industrial relations in the 1990s.

    1. Industrial Relations as a field of Study  2. The Origins, Growth and Development of Trade Unions  3. Trade Unions: An Uncertain Outlook  4. Trade Unions: Aims, Objectives and Government  5. The Industrial Enterprise, Management and Employers’ Associations  6. Collective Bargaining: An Introduction  7. Major Developments in Collective Bargaining  8. Industrial Democracy and Participation  9. Industrial Conflict  10. Strikes  11. The Role of the State in Industrial Relations

    Biography

    Michael P. Jackson