Bognanno and Coleman offer the most comprehensive, current, and valuable work on arbitrators and their professional practice. The contributors to this volume describe paths of career entry, compensation, demographics, market conditions facing arbitrators, and caseloads. The empirically based findings are drawn from a representative sampling of all the nation's arbitrators and afford a previously unavailable picture. The reader gains important insights into these decisionmakers' backgrounds, career development, arbital experiences, and aspirations.
This work is especially important because many of the arbitrators' characteristics, which are captured and described herein, are seen to be enduring or open only to change over an extended time period. The material, fascinating in its detailed analysis of a vital but surprisingly unstudied profession, presents a rich analysis of an occupation that has played a societal role of major significance from earliest times. A work, accordingly, of widespread interest and value relating to the ever fertile fields of dispute resolution.
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Verlagsort
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Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Maße
Höhe: 240 mm
Breite: 161 mm
Dicke: 15 mm
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ISBN-13
978-0-275-94375-2 (9780275943752)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
MARIO F. BOGNANNO is Professor and Director of the Industrial Relations Center, Carlson School of Management, The University of Minnesota. Among his publications are Labor Market Institutions and the Future Role of Unions (1992) and Contemporary Collective Bargaining.
CHARLES J. COLEMAN is Professor of Management at Rutgers University-Camden. He has earlier published Managing Labor Relations in the Public Sector and Personnel: An Open System Approach.
Preface Introduction to the NAA Survey by Clifford E. Smith The Varied Portraits of the Labor Arbitrator by Charles J. Coleman and Perry A. Zirkel Members of the National Academy of Arbitrators: Are They Different from Non-Academy Arbitrators? by William H. Holley, Jr. Entry and Acceptability in the Arbitration Profession: A Long Way To Go by Joseph Krislov The Arbitrator's Cases: Number, Sources, Issues, and Implications by Charles J. Coleman Feast or Famine: Critical Differences in Arbitration Earnings by Mario F. Bognanno Surplus or Shortage in the Market for Arbitration Services: NAA Membership Status, Work Status, and Geographic Dimensions by Mario F. Bognanno and Clifford E. Smith The NAA Study: Summation and Conclusions by Mario F. Bognanno and Charles J. Coleman Appendix I: Questionnaire Appendix II: Administrative Agencies Contacted for List of Arbitrators Index