Totality of conduct doctrine

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Totality of conduct doctrine is a test or review of the total bargaining process used to determine if a negotiating party has acted in good faith, as opposed to isolated acts that may have occurred during negotiations. Generally requires some “give and take” by a negotiating party to warrant good faith.


Definitions

According to Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining by Michael R. Carrell and Christina Heavrin (10th edition),

Totality of conduct doctrine. A test or review of the total bargaining process used to determine if a negotiating party has acted in good faith, as opposed to isolated acts that may have occurred during negotiations. Generally requires some “give and take” by a negotiating party to warrant good faith.

Related concepts

Related lectures