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Anti-unionism, Employer Strategy, and the Australian State, 1996–2005University of Sydney, Australia, r.cooper{at}econ.usyd.edu.au
University of Sydney, Australia
University of Sydney, Australia
University of Sydney, Australia One of the outstanding features of contemporary Australian industrial relations has been the dramatic growth in employer de-collectivization strategies. Four dimensions of employer strategies, sometimes interlinked and overlapping, are identified and analyzed in this article—employer lockouts, individualization of bargaining, counters to organizing campaigns, and the use of human resource initiatives in areas such as recruitment and selection. While some tactics have emerged organically through new management practices, the reconfiguration of employer strategies has been primarily state-led; legislative and non-legislative interventions have created opportunities, incentives and pressures for firms to adopt anti-union strategies.
Key Words: anti-union legislation collective bargaining lockouts organizing HRM
This version was published on September
1, 2009 Labor Studies Journal, Vol. 34, No. 3,
339-362 (2009) |
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