Discriminación en Empleo


Book Description

In the field of labour, new production and organisational techniques created by unprecedented technological development and by increasingly globalized competition, have aggravated a serious problem in most countries: unemployment. While unemployment is not a new phenomenon, most relatively developed countries have traditionally managed to balance it against a general condition of social well-being, provided that it did not exceed certain levels. The population not hit by unemployment was able to finance appropriate social security services to make up for the loss of income of households hit by the "scarcity of employment as a god". The current situation calls for new and creative solutions based on an attentive observation of reality and its changes. The challenge is to fight the effects of a phenomenon that, as stated above, has serious consequences, human as well as economic, for it precludes access to an occupation that entails personal achievement i.e. that makes people feel capable of helping others and of cooperating in the struggle to minimise the rationing that nature imposes on us. The problem is approached from the viewpoint of man as the centre of the issue, since man is the subject and protagonist of social life. This much repeated statement needs to be made true by means of institutions that are fully in force in community life, i.e., that become a part of our culture, of our way of living and of regarding the value of co-existence, of the dignity and of the things we use to live. The other subject discussed; international dimensions of collective bargaining: legal aspects, deals with a fundamental question that is the outcome of a process now affecting most countries: globalization.







The Actors of Collective Bargaining


Book Description

No one denies that the institution of collective bargaining between workers and employers has been a powerful tool for social dialogue. Without our history of effective collective bargaining there would be no mutual understanding, no industrial peace, no constructive cooperation between social partners. Yet there is a feeling today that this history has drawn to a close; that our post-industrial world demands something different, something our tradition of collective bargaining and collective agreements cannot give us. What information and insight can we gather to verify or challenge this feeling? This was the first major question addressed by the distinguished delegates to the twenty-seventh World Congress of Labour and Social Security Law held at Montevideo, 2'5 September 2003. The aim of the conference was to discover current problems regarding the existing structures and functions of collective bargaining in industrialized countries today'problems readily identifiable in the context of economic globalization, falling union density, the increase in atypical and knowledge-based workers, and the 'tertiarization' or declining economic importance of manufacturing-based industry. This bulletin contains some of the most important papers devoted to this major theme of the conference. It presents twenty national reports, each written by a scholar well-versed in the law and practice of collective bargaining in the country covered. Two introductory reports deal with such general issues as the varying competences of representatives under different legal systems, labor union representation within the public sector, the development of collective bargaining in EC law, the levels and structures of collective bargaining practice, and the widening gap between the relevant legal norms and real situations. The national reports were drafted on the basis of a questionnaire, which appears as an annex. This allows the reader to easily compare the solutions set forth for consideration in the various countries under review. The Actors of Collective Bargaining will be of great value for all practitioners and academics in the field of industrial relations.