Should Congress pass the Employee Free Choice Act? Some neighborly advice

Source: John Godard, Joseph B. Rose & Sara Slinn, Just Labour, Volume 15, Special Edition, November 2009

From the abstract:
American labour law is broken. As many as 60 percent of American workers would like to have a union, yet only 12 percent actually do. This is largely due to systematic employer interference, often in violation of existing laws. The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), currently before Congress, contains provisions to rectify this problem. Canada's experience with similar provisions can be helpful in evaluating the arguments surrounding this act. It suggests that the reforms proposed in EFCA can be expected to safeguard rather than deny employees' free choices. They will not alter the balance of power in collective bargaining, but only help to ensure that workers can exercise their basic right to meaningful representation at work and, potentially, to win gains that could help to reduce inequality and return America to prosperity.
See also:
- Fairness and opportunity for choice: The Employee Free Choice Act and the Canadian model
Source: Sara Slinn & Richard W. Hurd, Just Labour, Volume 15, Special Edition, November 2009

- Comments on "An Empirical Assessment of the Employee Free Choice Act: The Economic Implications," by Ann Layne-Farrar
Source: Susan Johnson, Just Labour, Volume 15, Special Edition, November 2009

- Faulty methodology generates faulty results: Comments on the paper entitled An Empirical Assessment of the Employee Free Choice Act: The Economic Implications," by Anne Layne-Farrar, March 2009
Source: Pierre Fortin, Just Labour, Volume 15, Special Edition, November 2009

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