The Legal and Institutional Framing of Collective Bargaining in CEE Countries scrutinises the legal and institutional framework for collective bargaining in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), including its development in the past two decades. The formerly communist countries of CEE have witnessed a profound transformation of their labour laws since the 1990s and, especially, after their accession to the European Union. Today, in comparison to the other Member States, they continue to have weak trade unions and employers associations and an underdeveloped system of collective bargaining. Moreover, the recent economic and financial crisis highlighted the need to invest further efforts in bringing the CEE industrial relations closer to the old Member States in order to facilitate more meaningful enforcement of the EU-wide economic and social policies. This is the first book to discuss this important matter in depth.What s in this book:Focusing on four current CEE labour law regimes in Slovenia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Poland that also have different collective bargaining trends and can be said to exemplify some of the main legal and institutional frameworks for collective bargaining that the CEE countries have developed, the author addresses the following major issues:the transition from a to an open market economy and the degree of continuing residual characteristics;the extent to which labour laws since the 1990s have enabled an adequate of industrial relations to allow free and voluntary collective bargaining at the national, sectoral, and company levels; andthe effectiveness of the standard-setting role of trade unions and employers associations insofar as they have persisted or come into play.The analysis always keeps in focus the development of labour laws in relation to a number of such interlinked elements as market transformation, type of privatisation of state ownership, and attitudes towards welfare. It draws on both the relevant literature and on t
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