This provocative book makes the case that trade unions must intervene in economic restructuring in order to halt the erosion of job quality in today's economy. The author, who is a professor at the Kogod College of Business Administration at The American University in Washington, D.C., specializes in labor-management relations and the social responsibilities of business and has brought both of these disciplines into focus for this book. Jacobs forcefully argues that collective bargaining is not merely a means to determine wages and benefits, but is also a powerful social tool that can move the corporation toward more socially responsible and responsive forms. While American unions are currently very weak, their regeneration should be a matter of public concern.Jacobs considers shopfloor organization, health-care delivery, and public education in the United States, as well as the process of democratization in Poland and South Africa, and explains how transformational bargaining by trade unions may promote favorable outcomes. The author explores the conventional wisdom in industrial relations theory and argues that business unionism, which focuses on bread and butter, is not an adequate model for American labor. Instead, unions can and must negotiate profound change in organizations. Unions can win bargains that preserve jobs, alter product lines, extend ownership, and redraw organizational boundaries. These possibilities are illuminated in case studies on such topics as auto manufacturing, public schools and Italian unionism.
Les mer
Argues that trade unions must intervene in economic restructuring in order to halt the erosion of job quality in today's economy. Jacobs suggests that collective bargaining is a powerful social tool that can move the corporation towards more socially responsible and responsive forms.
Les mer
Acknowledgments Introduction Adversary Participation and Transformational Bargaining Business Unionism Pragmatism, Social Intelligence, and Action Management-Sponsored Reform The Auto Workers Union Teachers and Transformational Bargaining Grand Bargains Obstacles to Transformational Bargaining in the United States International Experience with Transformational Bargaining Conclusions: The Concept of Social Enterprise A Dialogue Appendix: The Commission on the Future of Worker-Management Relations
Les mer
Asserts that trade unions must intervene in economic restructuring in order to halt the erosion of job quality in today's economy.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780899306940
Publisert
1994-01-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger Publishers Inc
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
184

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

DAVID C. JACOBS is Associate Professor of Labor, Business, and Society at the Department of Management, Kogod College of Business Administration, American University. He has consulted with trade unions on strategic issues and monitored international human rights issues for Americans for Democratic Action. Jacobs has published a number of essays exploring the potential of labor negotiations as an avenue for social change in such journals as Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations, Negotiation Journal, Labor Studies Journal, and The Academy of Management Review.