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Challenging Recognition — The Legitimacy of Employer Behaviour

Sian Moore, Sonia McKay and Sarah Veale
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Sian Moore: University of the West of England
Sonia McKay: London Metropolitan University
Sarah Veale: Trades Union Congress

Chapter 4 in Statutory Regulation and Employment Relations, 2013, pp 110-141 from Palgrave Macmillan

Abstract: Abstract This chapter turns to employer responses to recognition claims. As Chapter 1 described, employer behaviour defeated previous recognition legislation and the design of the 2000 statutory process aimed to ensure that this would not reoccur. Yet initial research (Ewing et al., 2003) suggested that employers had the potential to frustrate the purpose of the legislation, both within and outside the procedure. In the 2010 survey of the 20 unions that up to that point had used the procedure, the vast majority — 17 of 20 (85%) — considered that employer behaviour generally aimed to undermine union claims. This raises questions about the extent to which contesting recognition represents legitimate employer behaviour or whether its aim is to circumvent the rights to recognition provided by law, an aspect explored more fully in Chapter 6. Whilst CAC decisions document employer responses to claims once in the procedure, the seven case studies highlighted in this chapter offer a fuller picture of employer behaviour in the workplace. We draw upon both the CAC decisions and the case studies to identify employer strategies that preempt recognition claims, exploit legal technicalities, contest the union’s application by influencing CAC discretion and finally intervene in the workplace to undermine union support.

Keywords: Collective Bargaining; Union Member; Union Membership; Employment Relation; Employer Behaviour (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-137-02380-3_5

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DOI: 10.1057/9781137023803_5

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