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Behavioural Determinants of Public Sector Illegal Strikes: Cases from Canada and U.s.
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Hebdon, Robert (Author)
Title
            Behavioural Determinants of Public Sector Illegal Strikes: Cases from Canada and U.s.
        Abstract
            A framework for analyzing illegal public sector strikes is developed that explains observed patterns of behavior of employees, unions, managers, and third parties. It is found that no-strike laws diminish such positive effects of right-to-strike bargaining systems as eliciting information, adjusting expectations, and providing catharsis. A new theoretical outline helps understand and explain such illegal strike characteristics as the suddenness of strike development, the rank-and-file nature, lack of union control, conflict without clearly defined union objectives, and breakdown of the conflict regulation process by neutral agencies. Three policy issues emerge: 1. some conflict could have been avoided with a broader scope of bargaining, 2. mandatory and more responsive third party procedures should be legislatively provided, and 3. such information about worker discontent as grievance usage should be made available to dispute settlement agencies and mediators before conflict escalates out of control.
        Publication
            Relations industrielles / Industrial Relations
        Volume
            53
        Issue
            4
        Pages
            667-690
        Date
            Fall 1998
        Language
            English
        ISSN
            0034379X
        Accessed
            3/9/15, 10:47 PM
        Rights
            Copyright Les Presses de L'Universite Laval Fall 1998
        Citation
            Hebdon, R. (1998). Behavioural Determinants of Public Sector Illegal Strikes: Cases from Canada and U.s. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 53(4), 667–690. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/1998/v53/n4/index.html
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