A Handbook for Grievance Arbitration

A Handbook for Grievance Arbitration

Author: Arnold Zack

Publisher: American Arbitration Association

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 232

ISBN-13:

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This text aims to prepare arbitrators and representatives of unions for arbitration hearings. Arranged chronologically, the guide begins advice on avoiding arbitration, progresses to arrangements for the hearing, covers the hearing itself, and concludes with the decision. All aspects of procedural matters, evidentiary problems and professional responsibility are explained, and case studies raise issues and offer solutions that are based on actual arbitration hearings.


Labor Arbitration Practice

Labor Arbitration Practice

Author: Charles S. Loughran

Publisher:

Published: 2021

Total Pages: 807

ISBN-13: 9781641058322

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"A guidebook for preparing and presenting a case to an arbitrator or board of arbitration"--


A Handbook of Dispute Resolution

A Handbook of Dispute Resolution

Author: Karl J Mackie

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-01-11

Total Pages: 355

ISBN-13: 1134952805

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A Handbook of Dispute Resolution examines the theoretical and practical developments that are transforming the practice of lawyers and other professionals engaged in settling disputes, grievance-handling and litigation. The book explains what distinguishes ADR from other forms of dispute resolution and examines the role ADR can play in a range of contexts where litigation would once have been the only option, such as family law and company law. In some areas, like industrial relations, ADR is not an alternative, but the main method of conflict-intervention, and several contributors draw on their experience of negotiating between management and unions. A wide variety of methods is open to the non-litigious, including resort to Ombudsmen, negotiation, small claims courts and mini-trials; these and other options receive detailed attention. Given the newness of ADR as a discipline, questions about the training of mediators and about the role of central government have not yet been resolved. The final section of the book is devoted to discussion of these issues. Case studies are drawn from the international arena - examples from China, Canada, Australia, Germany and North America place ADR in a cultural and historical perspective.


How Arbitration Works

How Arbitration Works

Author: Frank Elkouri

Publisher:

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13:

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This treatise contains a broad array of developments in labor-management dispute resolution.