What Do Unions Do?: A Twenty-year Perspective

Author:   James T. Bennett ,  Bruce E. Kaufman
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Inc
ISBN:  

9781412805940


Pages:   662
Publication Date:   15 December 2006
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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What Do Unions Do?: A Twenty-year Perspective


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Author:   James T. Bennett ,  Bruce E. Kaufman
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Inc
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.70cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.952kg
ISBN:  

9781412805940


ISBN 10:   1412805945
Pages:   662
Publication Date:   15 December 2006
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Upon its publication in 1984, Richard Freeman and James Medoff's widely acclaimed What Do Unions Do? rewrote economists' understanding of the impact of labor unions. The book under review, originally published as a six-part symposium in the Journal of Labor Research, reassesses Freeman and Medoff's book and the title question in light of two decades of additional data, experience, and perspective. The contributors are among the field's most respected and well-published scholars. Their 20 chapters approach the issue from a judicious, complementary combination of theoretical, empirical, institutional, international, and historical angles grappling with the impact of unions on wages, inequality, employee benefits, productivity, profitability, human resource management policies, conflict resolution, employee voice, job satisfaction, job turnover, macroeconomic performance, and politics. Highlights include Barry Hirsch's chapter, What Do Unions Do for Economic Performance? It concludes that Freeman and Medoff's provocative thesis that unions substantially increase productivity has not held up well. Other highlights are Bruce Kaufman's chapter giving an overall assessment and commentary on the original volume and Richard Freeman's closing remarks--which concede little ground to critics. This encyclopedic, balanced volume is a must for any collection on unions, labor studies, or labor economics. Esssential. --Choice <br><br> In 1984, Harvard professors Richard Freeman and James Medoff published a book entitled What Do Unions Do? . The book was greatly discussed back in the mid-1980s and it remains one of the most frequently cited works in the labor law and economics. The United States is overdue for a rethinking of its authoritarian labor relations law. When that time comes, Perspective will have a role to play in shaping the debate. <br> -- George C. Leef Regulation Winter , 2008


<p> Upon its publication in 1984, Richard Freeman and James Medoff's widely acclaimed What Do Unions Do? rewrote economists' understanding of the impact of labor unions. The book under review, originally published as a six-part symposium in the Journal of Labor Research, reassesses Freeman and Medoff's book and the title question in light of two decades of additional data, experience, and perspective. The contributors are among the field's most respected and well-published scholars. Their 20 chapters approach the issue from a judicious, complementary combination of theoretical, empirical, institutional, international, and historical angles grappling with the impact of unions on wages, inequality, employee benefits, productivity, profitability, human resource management policies, conflict resolution, employee voice, job satisfaction, job turnover, macroeconomic performance, and politics. Highlights include Barry Hirsch's chapter, What Do Unions Do for Economic Performance? It concludes that Freeman and Medoff's provocative thesis that unions substantially increase productivity has not held up well. Other highlights are Bruce Kaufman's chapter giving an overall assessment and commentary on the original volume and Richard Freeman's closing remarks--which concede little ground to critics. This encyclopedic, balanced volume is a must for any collection on unions, labor studies, or labor economics. Esssential. <p> --Choice <p> In 1984, Harvard professors Richard Freeman and James Medoff published a book entitled What Do Unions Do? ... The book was greatly discussed back in the mid-1980s and it remains one of the most frequently cited works in the labor law and economics... The United States is overdue for a rethinking of its authoritarian labor relations law. When that time comes, Perspective will have a role to play in shaping the debate. <p> --George C. Leef Regulation Winter , 2008


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