Strategic Negotiations: A Theory of Change in Labor-Management Relations (Cornell Paperbacks)

Strategic Negotiations: A Theory of Change in Labor-Management Relations (Cornell Paperbacks)

by RichardE.Walton (Author), RobertB.McKersie (Author), JoelE.Cutcher-Gershenfeld (Author)

Synopsis

Strategic Negotiations makes a significant contribution to the literature on strategic choice (the explicit structuring by management and labor of business and bargaining strategies that use the economic and political environment as a framework to create bargaining power). The authors intentionally build upon previous work in A Behavioral Theory of Labor Negotiations, but this book also is a successful application of the three-tiered collective bargaining theory first developed in The Transformation of American Industrial Relations. Although scholars have identified strategic initiatives in the collective bargaining relationship, recent research has continued to emphasize economic explanations. This book provides an alternative framework of analysis. . . . [Strategic Negotiations] provides abundant evidence, both theoretical and empirical, that the traditional concerns of industrial relations researchers are still relevant.-Industrial and Labor Relations Review

$57.03

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 376
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 14 Sep 2000

ISBN 10: 0801486971
ISBN 13: 9780801486975

Media Reviews
Strategic Negotiations makes a significant contribution to the literature on strategic choice (the explicit structuring by management and labor of business and bargaining strategies that use the economic and political environment as a framework to create bargaining power). The authors intentionally build upon previous work in A Behavioral Theory of Labor Negotiations, but this book also is a successful application of the three-tiered collective bargaining theory first developed in The Transformation of American Industrial Relations. Although scholars have identified strategic initiatives in the collective bargaining relationship, recent research has continued to emphasize economic explanations. This book provides an alternative framework of analysis. . . . Strategic Negotiations provides abundant evidence, both theoretical and empirical, that the traditional concerns of industrial relations researchers are still relevant. -Industrial and Labor Relations Review
This book is both an amalgam of and a valuable, although incremental, addition to widely accepted theories within the domain of labour-management relations and negotiations. . . It is a must read for anyone interested in industrial theory and negotiations. -Karen J. Bentham, Queen's University. The Journal of Industrial Relations, September 2001