Public Sector Unionization in the U.S.
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A study of public sector unionization in the United States, as this phenomenon may affect the municipal government in Blue Sky City, has been prepared, and is transmitted herewith. This study addresses specifically (1) the development of the union movement, (2) the concept of worker power, (3) the right of public sector employees to bargain collectively, (4) work stoppages in the public sector, and (5) budgetary issues associated with public sector unionization.Public sector unionization may provide a means to the development of meaningful workers' control in the nonprofit and governmental sectors of the economy. While public sector unionization was slow to start, it represents one of the few bright spots for organized labor in the lastquarter of the twentieth century. When public sector unionization is considered within the context of budgets, the thought most often runs to wage and salary levels. Control of the approach to work, however, may be of equal or even greater significance for budgets. __________________________________Staff Worker, Personnel Department This research provides an overview of public sector unionization in the United States. Topics discussed in this research are (1) the development of the union movement, (2) the concept of worker power, (3) the right of public sector employees to bargain collectively, (4) work stoppages in the public sector, and (5) budgetary issues associated with public sector unionization.
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economic status of Britain, as it could remain as a major international competitor by 2000. As a society, the United States appears to have equal chances of (1) developing improved living standards and lifestyles for the vast majority of the population, on the one hand, and (2) becoming a twotiered Latin American style society, on the other hand. What the American economy and society become in the next century will depend largely on the performance of Americans as workers.
The concept of workers' control effectively describes the value and the appropriate role for workers' control in an economy and in a society. With this basis, together with an understanding of how the United States lost sight of the concept in the past, public administrators will be in a stronger position to develop the policy initiatives which will enable the United States to remain in the international economic forefront.
Public sector unionization may provide a means to the development of meaningful workers' control in the nonprofit and governmental sectors of the economy. While public sector unionization was slow to start, it represents one of the few bright spots for organized labor in the lastquarter of the twentieth century.13
THE RIGHT OF PU
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Some common words found in the essay are:
United Organized, Controllers Union, Relations Act, United States7, AFL CIO, World War, SECTOR UNIONIZATION, Administration Washington, Sky City, Latin American, public sector, workers' control, sector unionization, public sector unionization, air traffic, organized labor, traffic controllers, collective bargaining, air traffic controllers, concept workers' control, american economy, concept workers', wage salary, traffic controllers union, wage salary levels,
Approximate Word count = 3695
Approximate Pages = 15 (250 words per page)
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