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From Advice to “Secret Mandates”: The Evolution of Government Intervention in Public-Sector Bargaining in Alberta, Canada
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Foster, Jason (Author)
- Barnetson, Bob (Author)
- Cake, Susan (Author)
Title
From Advice to “Secret Mandates”: The Evolution of Government Intervention in Public-Sector Bargaining in Alberta, Canada
Abstract
Governments in Canada are increasingly using multiple tools to advance their political agenda at the expense of free collective bargaining in the public sector. Legislative intervention has long been a strategy to curtail bargaining rights (Evans et al., 2023). Recently, governments have turned to non-legislative means to influence bargaining outcomes. This article is about the use of a coordination office, a decidedly non-legislative tactic, and how, over two rounds of negotiations, it transformed public-sector bargaining in Alberta. Bargaining has been further transformed by enactment of a legal requirement to keep the government’s mandates secret, the outcome being increased frustration among union representatives and potential damage to long-term relationships. Together, these measures have provided the government with a powerful means of influence, which, if successful, could spread to other jurisdictions.
Publication
Relations industrielles / Industrial Relations
Volume
79
Issue
1
Pages
17 pages
Date
2024
Journal Abbr
ri
Language
English
ISSN
0034-379X, 1703-8138
Short Title
From Advice to “Secret Mandates”
Accessed
8/13/24, 1:49 PM
Extra
Publisher: Département des relations industrielles de l’Université Laval
Citation
Foster, J., Barnetson, B., & Cake, S. (2024). From Advice to “Secret Mandates”: The Evolution of Government Intervention in Public-Sector Bargaining in Alberta, Canada. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 79(1), 17 pages. https://doi.org/10.7202/1112835ar
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