Labour Relations
Labour Relations
Labour Relations
collective bargaining at the workplace and at sectoral level. It also deals with strikes
and lockouts, workplace forums and alternative dispute resolution. It also establishes
the CCMA, Labour Court and Labour Appeal Court as superior courts, with exclusive
jurisdiction to decide matters arising from the Act.
(ss 1-3)
The purpose of this Act* is to advance economic development, social justice, labour peace and the
democratisation of the work-place by fulfilling the primary objects of this Act, which are-
* An italicised word or phrase indicates that the word or phrase is defined in section 213 of this Act.
a. to give effect to and regulate the fundamental rights conferred by section 23 of the
Constitution*
b. to give effect to obligations incurred by the Republic as a member state of the International
Labour Organisation;
c. to provide a framework within which employees and their trade unions, employers and
employers' organisations can-
i. collectively bargain to determine wages, terms and conditions of employment and other
matters of mutual interest; and
d. to promote-
d. Chart Of Dispute
Resolution Stages And Steps
e. Today, because of the flexibility, adaptability and versatility of ADR, Users of dispute resolution
processes have available to them a wide variety of techniques that can be used to prevent, control and
resolve disputes. New techniques are constantly being developed to deal with the wide variety of
potential disputes that can occur in any kind of relationship, and at any stage in the development or
escalation of a problem or dispute.
f. It has become increasingly common for parties about to enter into a relationship to combine a series of
dispute prevention, control and resolution processes into a ‘system’ or series of ‘steps’ that are
designed to deal with different kinds of problems or disputes that might occur, at successive stages in
the development and escalation of a dispute. These processes can be grouped for convenience into
four broad categories or stages:
g. The Prevention and Cooperation Stage, where parties can use prevention and cooperation
techniques, tailored to encourage alignment of interests, improve cooperation, prevent or minimise the
adverse impact of problems, and curb adversarial attitudes.
h. The Dispute De-Escalation, Control and ‘Real Time’ Resolution Stage, where parties can use
techniques that are designed to deal promptly and realistically with problems, differences of opinion
or disagreements at the time they arise, to de-escalate tensions, resolve problems, or achieve instant
resolution of disputes.
i. The Facilitated Resolution Stage, where parties, assisted and guided by mediators and other dispute
resolution professionals, can use any of a a wide variety of techniques, or combinations of
techniques, to achieve a mutually-acceptable resolution of a dispute.
j. The Binding Resolution Stage, where, after all other efforts at resolution have failed, parties can have
a ‘back stop’ adjudication process in which the dispute will be finally resolved by a neutral third party
— either in a privately-agreed process such as arbitration, or, by default, in a court of law.
k. These stages are graphically illustrated in the attached Chart of Dispute Resolution Stages and Steps,
which lists various techniques in the order in which they would normally be employed in the life of a
dispute, and demonstrates, in dramatic ‘stair step’ fashion, escalating degrees of hostility, cost, and
time for achieving resolution, from stage to stage, as an unresolved dispute progresses.
l.
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2. Employer:
Employer is the second party to IR. In the corporate organisation,
employer is represented by the management. Hence, management
becomes responsible to various stakeholders in an organisation
including employees.
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3. Government:
The role of government in the matter of industrial relations has been
changing along with changes in industrial environment and
management perspective. For example, till century, the governments
everywhere in the world adopted a policy of laissez faire.