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Charting the Boundaries of Labour Law: Innis Christie and the Search for an Integrated Law of Labour Market Regulations

  • Harry Arthurs
  • York University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

Abstract

What an honour it is to deliver the first Innis Christie lecture in labour and employment law. My career and Innis' developed in parallel. Our very first publications dealt with tort liability for strikes; our early research dealt with collective labour law; we worked together on a labour law casebook; we both shuffled sideways from labour law into administrative law and lurched from there into legal ethics; we both became labour mediators and arbitrators and then-a logical progression-deans of law. Finally, we both worked on government policy studies, starting with the Woods Task Force in the mid-1960s, though Innis became far more extensively involved with government than I did.
Original languageCanadian English
JournalDalhousie Law Journal
Issue number1.0
Publication statusPublished - Apr. 1 2011

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth
    SDG 8 Decent Work and Economic Growth

Keywords

  • labour law
  • employment law
  • collective labour law
  • individual
  • workplace
  • pluralism
  • regulation
  • market

Disciplines

  • Labor and Employment Law

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