Difference between revisions of "National Labor Relations Act"
(→Related lectures) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | [[National Labor Relations Act]] (alternatively known as [[Wagner Act]] and [[National Labor Relations Act of 1935]]; also known by its acronym, [[NLRA]]; hereinafter, ''NLRA'') is the cornerstone of | + | [[National Labor Relations Act]] (alternatively known as [[Wagner Act]] and [[National Labor Relations Act of 1935]]; also known by its acronym, [[NLRA]]; hereinafter, ''NLRA'') is the cornerstone of [[United States Federal Government|United States Federal]] [[labor law]]. The act was the first in history to give most [[private sector|private-sector]] [[employee]]s the right to organize into unions, to bargain collectively with employers, to define unfair labor practices by employers, and to create the [[NLRB]]. |
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
*[[Labor relations]]. The systematic study of [[attitude]]s, [[motivation]]s, and [[behavior]]s which two or more [[job-market actor]]s assume toward each another. | *[[Labor relations]]. The systematic study of [[attitude]]s, [[motivation]]s, and [[behavior]]s which two or more [[job-market actor]]s assume toward each another. | ||
− | ==Related lectures== | + | ==See also== |
− | *[[ | + | ===Related lectures=== |
+ | :*[[Labor Laws]] | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category: CNM Cyber Orientation]][[Category: Articles]] |
Latest revision as of 21:11, 24 May 2020
National Labor Relations Act (alternatively known as Wagner Act and National Labor Relations Act of 1935; also known by its acronym, NLRA; hereinafter, NLRA) is the cornerstone of United States Federal labor law. The act was the first in history to give most private-sector employees the right to organize into unions, to bargain collectively with employers, to define unfair labor practices by employers, and to create the NLRB.
Definitions
According to Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining by Michael R. Carrell and Christina Heavrin (10th edition),
- National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act). The cornerstone of U.S. Federal labor law. The act was the first in history to give most private-sector employees the right to organize into unions, to bargain collectively with employers, to define unfair labor practices by employers, and to create the NLRB.
Related concepts
- Labor relations. The systematic study of attitudes, motivations, and behaviors which two or more job-market actors assume toward each another.