...many of the essays sort out key issues and problems with great insight. Hugh Collins The Modern Law Review September 2005 The Future of Labour Law is an excellent book, and it will stand as a very fine testament to Bob Hepple's contribution to labour law. The separate contributions are of a very high standard, and some of them are likely to become very important in their own right. I congratulate the editors and the publishers and warmly recommend the work to all with an interest in this evolving field. Richard Mitchell, Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law, University of Melbourne Industrial Law Journal July 2005
The Future of Labour Law: Introduction
Catherine Barnard, Simon Deakin and Gillian S Morris
1. The Ideology of New Labour Law
Sandra Fredman
2. Laws Against Strikes Revisited
Keith Ewing
3. Trade Unions and Collective Bargaining: Law and the Future of Collectivism
William Brown and Sarah Oxenbridge
4. Workers, Finance and Democracy
Simon Deakin
5. Termination of Employment: Whose Property Rights?
Steven Anderman
6. Changing Perspectives Upon the Employment Relationship in British Labour Law
Paul Davies and Mark Freedland
7. The Future of the Public/Private Labour Law Divide
Gillian S Morris
8. Episodes on the Path Towards the European Social Model: The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights and the Convention on the Future of Europe 179
Brian Bercusson
9. The ‘Making’ of EU Labour Law and the ‘Future’ of Labour Lawyers
Silvana Sciarra
10. The Future of Equality Law: Equality and Beyond
Catherine Barnard
11. The Future of Workers’ Participation in the EU
Manfred Weiss
12. The Future of Labour Law : Is There a Role for International Labour Standards?
Breen Creighton
13. Beyond Borrowing and Bending: Labour Market Regulation and the Future of Labour Law in Southern Africa
Evance Kalula
14. The End of Labour Law as We Have Known It?
Paul O’Higgins