Swimming against the tide? Australian labour regulation and the fissured workplace
Data(s) |
2015
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Resumo |
In The Fissured Workplace, David Weil dissects the ways in which ostensibly ‘large’ American businesses have come to shed direct employees and instead source their labour needs through a ‘complicated network of smaller business units’. As he notes, this has increased the profitability of these ‘lead’ businesses, at the expense of those who (ultimately) work for them: Wage setting and supervision shift from core businesses to a myriad of organizations, each operating under the rigorous standards of lead businesses but facing fierce competitive pressures. Although lead businesses set demanding goals and standards, and often detailed work practice requirements for subsidiary companies, the actual liability, oversight, and supervision of the workforce become the problem of one or more other organizations. And by replacing a direct employment relationship with a fissured workplace, employment itself becomes more precarious, with risk shifted onto smaller employers and individual workers, who are often cast in the role of independent businesses in their own right. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
University of Illinois * College of Law |
Relação |
https://www.law.illinois.edu/publications/cllpj/ Johnstone, Richard & Stewart, Andrew (2015) Swimming against the tide? Australian labour regulation and the fissured workplace. Comparative Labour Law & Policy Journal, 37(1), pp. 55-90. |
Direitos |
University of Illinois * College of Law |
Fonte |
Faculty of Law; School of Law |
Palavras-Chave | #180100 LAW #180106 Comparative Law #180118 Labour Law #labour law #fissured workplace #Australian Labor Regulations #comparative law |
Tipo |
Journal Article |