Third-Party Intervention in Collective Bargaining Disputes
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Abstract
Changes to business models, labour laws and the weakening of unions have resulted in a significant reliance on third-party interventions such facilitation, conciliation, mediation and arbitration to avoid strikes and resolve collective bargaining disputes. Studies indicate that third-party intervention has been effective in settling bargaining disputes when:- the intensity of conflict was moderate;- there was a mutual commitment to reaching agreement; - resources were not scarce;- disputants disagreed on specific, targeted items;- parties were of relatively equal power;- disputes concerned new collective agreement language (rather than the interpretation of existing articles);- issues of disagreement concerned salary. However, lack of data from the point of view of those who are bound by the conditions of a contract settled during collective bargaining with the assistance of a third-party is worrisome. This review describes common bargaining conflict and types of third-party interventions, including triggers for effectiveness. It also analyses empirical evidence that points to some limited success with third-party intervention, but ultimately concludes that without more evidence regarding the quality of collective bargaining agreements, negotiators should be cautious in their use of third-party interventions.
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Collective bargaining, Third-party intervention, Collective agreements, Conflict resolution, Negotiations
Citation
Dekker, J. (2018, May). Third Party Intervention in Collective Bargaining Disputes. Presented at the Canadian Association of Professional Academic Librarians 2018 Meeting, Regina SK.
