Labour legislation and public policy : a contemporary history

Bibliographic Information

Labour legislation and public policy : a contemporary history

Paul Davies and Mark Freedland

(Clarendon law series)

Clarendon Press, 1994, c1993

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Reprinted in paperback, 1994

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The traditional legal textbooks aim to give students of the law a synoptic overview of the present state of law in a particular area. In doing so, most books offer only a cursory assessment of how the law came to be the way it is and what economic, political and social forces were brought to bear during its evolution. This study seeks to offer students a different kind of text, which takes as its starting point the law as it was in 1945. Guiding the student through four-and-a-half decades of almost continuous legislative activity, Davies and Freedland show how the law was created, and why it looks as it does today. The history explored is from 1945 to 1990, but not including the period since Mr Major succeeded Mrs Thatcher as Prime Minister. Paul Davies is also the editor of the "Industrial Law Journal". Mark Freedland has also written "The Contract of Employment" and "Labour Law, Cases and Materials" (with Paul Davies).

Table of Contents

  • Collective laissez-faire
  • full employment and the postwar consensus 1945-1951
  • the easy decade 1951-1961
  • modernization and experiments with planning 1961-1969
  • industrial justice and the individual worker 1968-1974
  • the end of agreement - collective labour law 1964-1970
  • the failed revolution - collective labour law 1970-1974
  • the social contract 1974-1979
  • reducing the power of trade unions 1979-1990
  • restructuring the labour economy 1979-1990
  • conclusion - a post-war perspective.

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