Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations in
Industrialized Market Economies
di R. Blanpain
J. Baker
G. J. Bamber
M. Biagi
Comparativism is no longer a purely academic exercise
but has increasingly become an urgent necessity for industrial relations and
legal practitioners, due to the growth of multinational enterprises and the
impact of international and regional organizations aspiring to harmonize rules.
The growing need for comprehensive, up-to-date, and readily available
information on labour law and industrial relations in different countries led
to the publication of the International Encyclopaedia for Labour Law and
Industrial Relations, in which almost 100 international and national monographs
have thus far been published. This book, Comparative Labour Law and Industrial
Relations in Industrialized Market Economies, goes further than the
Encyclopaedia inasmuch as most of the chapters provide comparative and
integrated thematic treatment. The aim is to describe the salient
characteristics and trends in labour law and industrial relations in the
contemporary world.