Module description
This module covers only the Semester 1 part of a full year module
Introduction
What rights do you have when you get a job? Why has income inequality been increasing? Why is there a gender pay gap between men and women, and what can the law do about it? Why do people join unions and collectively bargain? Why do unions take collective action, including strikes? Is the real world like ‘reality TV’, where employers can shout ‘you’re fired!’ and workers are dismissed at will? Is there a solution to unemployment, to ensure economic prosperity and social justice? Labour Law is a rapidly developing and highly topical branch of the law. It deals with:
- The relationship between workers and employing entities (usually in corporate form),
Labour Law will affect most students at some stage of their working lives. It is an increasingly important part of many legal practices. It has also probably been the most politically significant and contentious legal subject worldwide since the Industrial Revolution. It rests at the foundation of modern social democracy. As well as seminars on history and theory, two main sections of the course are:
- The contract of employment and rights at work
- Equality and anti-discrimination law in the workplace
Assessment details
Coursework 100%
Educational aims & objectives
This course will ask:
- what justifies labour law, socially and economically, and how does it combat unequal bargaining power?
- to what extent is there a minimum floor of rights in contracts, wages, working time and child care?
- do the Equality Act 2010 and part-time, fixed-term or agency laws, promote social inclusion?
Teaching pattern
Seminar (1 x 2 hours per week)
Indicative schedule (2022/23, so subject to change):
- History
- Scope of labour law
- Contract of employment
- Implied terms and variation
- Wage and pension rights
Reading week
- Working time and child care
- Atypical work
- Discrimination and detriment
- Disadvantage and positive action
- Votes at work
Suggested reading list
- H Collins, K Ewing and A McColgan, Labour Law (Cambridge 2012)
- E McGaughey, A Casebook on Labour Law (Hart 2018)