Unfair Advantage: Workers' Freedom Of Association In The United States Under International Human Rights Standards (Human Rights Watch Books)
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Description
Unfair Advantage approaches workers use of organizing, collective bargaining, and strikes as an exercise of basic rights where workers are autonomous actors, not objects of unions or employers institutional interests. Both historical experience and a review of current conditions around the world indicate that strong, independent, democratic trade unions are vital for societies where human rights are respected. In Lance Compa s view, human rights cannot flourish where workers rights are not enforced. While researching workers exercise of these rights in different industries, occupations, and regions of the United States, Human Rights Watch found that freedom of association is under severe, often buckling pressure when workers in the United States try to exercise it. Cornell University Press is making this valuable report, originally published in August 2000, available again as a paperback with a new introduction and conclusion that bring the story up-to-date.
