...an important and extremely readable contribution to current debates regarding the idea of labour law, and an affectionate and fitting tribute to Freedland.
- Ruth Dukes, Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal
<p>This book not only contains excellent contributions from outstanding scholars; that is taken for granted when we speak about ‘Oxford labour law’. Most valuable is the insider information that the authors provide about labour law scholars in Oxford. This insider knowledge, sometimes even jokes, make the reading of the book not only<br />worthwhile, but highly entertaining.</p>
- Erika Kovács, European Journal of Social Security
Part I: Labour Law’s Autonomy: Theory and Methodology
1 Otto Kahn-Freund, the Contract of Employment and the Autonomy of Labour Law
Mark Freedland
2 Contractual Autonomy
Hugh Collins
3 Labour Law and the Trade Unions: Autonomy and Betrayal
Alan Bogg
4 Common Law Confusion and Empirical Research in Labour Law
Lizzie Barmes
5 Evaluating the Reflexive Turn in Labour Law
Diamond Ashiagbor
Part II: Labour Law’s Autonomy: Core Organizing Concepts
6 Autonomous Concepts in Labour Law? The Complexities of the Employing Enterprise Revisited
Jeremias Prassl
7 Uses and Misuses of ‘Mutuality of Obligations’ and the Autonomy of Labour Law
Nicola Countouris
8 Migrants and Forced Labour: A Labour Law Response
Cathryn Costello
Part III: Labour Law’s Autonomy: Labour Law, Public Law and Human Rights
9 Labour Law as Public Law
ACL Davies
10 Equality Law: Labour Law or an Autonomous Field?
Sandra Fredman
11 Labour Law as Human Rights Law: A Critique of the Use of ‘Dignity’ by Freedland and Kountouris
Christopher McCrudden
12 The EU Internal Market and Domestic Labour Law: Looking Beyond Autonomy
Phil Syrpis and Tonia Novitz
Part IV: Labour Law’s Autonomy: Labour Law, Commercial Law and Economic Theory
13 Labour Law as the Law of the Business Enterprise
Alice Carse and Wanjiru Njoya
14 Conceptualizing the Employer as Fiduciary: Mission Impossible?
Jill Murray
15 Efficiency Arguments for the Collective Representation of Workers: A Sketch
Paul Davies
16 Labour Law on the Plateau: Towards Regulatory Policy for Endogenous Norms
Deirdre McCann
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Alan Bogg is Professor of Labour Law at the University of Oxford and Fellow and Tutor in Law at Hertford College.
Cathryn Costello is Andrew W Mellon Associate Professor in International Human Rights and Refugee Law, Refugee Studies Centre, Oxford Department of International Development.
ACL Davies is Professor of Law and Public Policy, University of Oxford and Garrick Fellow and Tutor in Law at Brasenose College.
Jeremias Prassl is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, and a Tutorial Fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford.