SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT -- CHANGE OF DATES FOR CONFERENCE The following message is a repeat, except for the change in dates: not the Thanksgiving weekend but the Remembrance Day weekend in Canada. If you replied to the earlier announcement, please confirm that you are available on the new dates. If you had not (yet) replied and are interested in coming in some capacity (speaker, workshop participant, attendant), please let us know. Our grant application must be finalised by 8 July, so please send us your suggestions and/or confirmation before that date. Thank you. Paul Phillips, programme chair Jesse Vorst (convener) The rise and demise of collective bargaining: 50 years PC1003 Conference 10-13 November 1994 -- Winnipeg Secretariat: 361 University College, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg MB R3T 2M8. Phone 204-474-9119. Fax 204-261-0021. E-mail: Internet/NetNorth [EMAIL PROTECTED] June 1994 Dear friend, To commemorate the landmark PC1003 we are planning a conference around the history and state of collective bargaining in Canada and other western industrialised countries. The text of the conference description, as submitted to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, is enclosed. We hope to have some thirty speakers at the conference from various walks of life and work: unionists, academics, students, activists. Perspectives will be provided from a number of areas: labour & industrial relations, economics, politics & political science, law, history, sociology, and others. If early contacts are any indication, there is considerable interest to attend this event. The proceedings of the conference will form the basis of a publication, to be available in the spring of 1995. Formal plenary sessions (with research papers), round-tables and workshops are planned. With this letter we invite you to submit a proposal for your participation -- hopefully in the form of the presentation of a paper; please fill out (typed) the enclosed SSHRC form and return to the above address by 30 June. We have to submit our session line-ups by 8 July to SSHRC who (we hope) will provide financial support to the conference. Note that your submission does not, at this stage, commit you to formal participation. We need it to complete the SSHRC application and to get some idea of the interest for the conference. We also enclose a preliminary participation form; please return that at your earliest opportunity. It is designed to find out whether you are interested to participate in any type of of the various events planned -- or to just attend without active involvement. The weekend of 10-13 November has been chosen for a number of practical reasons, and is now the definite time for the conference. We hope to hear from you soon. With greetings of peace, Jesse Vorst Conference convener TEXT OF CONFERENCE PROPOSAL AS SUBMITTED TO SSHRCC: In 1944, as the 2nd World War was drawing to a close, the Canadian government propelled by worker unrest and a new liberal-left political ethos emanating from revulsion of fascism, passed Order-in-Council PC1003, legislation that revolutionized industrial relations in Canada. The Order-in-Council incorporated union recognition and compulsory collective bargaining provisions borrowed from the United States' Wagner Act with Canadian-British union legalization provisions and government intervention provisions that date back to the 1872 Trades Union Act and the 1907 Industrial Disputes and Investigation Act. PC1003 was incorporated in Federal Legislation in 1948 and ultimately in provincial legislation shortly thereafter. The era that followed in industrial relations has been labelled in the US as the era of the "labour-management accord" though the general characteristics are more or less common to the "Anglo" economies (Canada, US, Britain). The central principles of the accord were a) acceptance by the employers of collective bargaining, unions and the right of labour to a "fair" share of national income; b) acceptance by unions and labour of the rights of capital to manage and introduce technological change; and c) acceptance by government of its obligation to maintain full employment (Keynesian demand management) and provide a basic welfare state to insure labour against the vagaries of industrial capitalism. The Accord appeared as a great success for over two decades, until the 1970s, when a combination of economic and political events/forces resulted in a gradual unravelling of the concensus and an increase in class conflict. The dismemberment is perhaps best documented in Leo Panitch and Don Shwartz's multi-edition book ** The Assault on Trade Union Freedoms **. What is not well explored are the economic and political factors leading to the collapse of the "accord", nor of the industrial relations regime and ideology that has replaced the system introduced 50 years ago. This involves a multi-disciplinary approach -- economics, industrial relations, politics, sociology, law, history -- to the last half century. It is the intent of the conference, therefore, to explore the various disciplinary (and interdisciplinary) aspects of the "industrial relations regime of PC1003". Preliminary planning would suggest the following general session foci. a) The Rise and Fall of the Post-War Economic Expansion; b) Labour, Government and Management in the Post-PC1003 period; c) Labour Law and Industrial Relations after 1944; d) Political-Economic Change and the Future of Canadian Industrial Relations; e) Work and Organized Labour: Past and Future. These are obviously not hard-and-fast categories. The purpose is rather to evaluate the experience of the past half-century since the passage of PC1003 in terms of what it might tell us about the future direction of industrial relations in Canada. In this regard, we hope to include an international perspective with comparative papers on countries of similar economic development -- United States, Britain, Sweden, Australia, Germany. Since the Wood's Task Force Report of 1966, we have not had any general review of the Canadian industrial relations system instituted by PC1003 in 1944. While a single conference can not substitute for an enquiry as broad as the Task Force, it can serve to illuminate and raise issues that have perhaps been neglected in the Canadian industrial relations system since then. The 50th anniversary of PC1003 provides the ideal opportunity for such an evaluation and review. THE FOLLOWING FORM IS FOR USE BY THE CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT Conference participant form The rise and demise of collective bargaining: 50 years PC1003 Conference 10-13 November 1994 -- Winnipeg Secretariat: 361 University College, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg MB R3T 2M8. Phone 204-474-9119. Fax 204-261-0021. E-mail: Internet/NetNorth [EMAIL PROTECTED] Preliminary Participation Form ____ I am interested in presenting a paper on the following topic: (I attach the SSHRC form with the proposal and other information typed in) ____ I am interested in participating in a workshop (without a formal paper) on the following topic: ____ I am interested in attending the conference but cannot actively participate in a plenary session or a workshop. PERSONAL INFORMATION: Surname: First name(s): Present affiliation and mailing address (incl. postal code): Phone: (home)(_____)_______________ (work)(___)________________ Fax:(_____)__________________ e-mail:______________________________ on the following net: Please, return this form (typed) and the SSHRC-form (if applicable) to Jesse Vorst (see the address listed at the top of this form). June 1994 THE FOLLOWING FORM IS TO BE FILLED OUT FOR FORWARDING BY THE SECRETARIAT TO SSHRCC. PLEASE DO NOT SEND TO SSHRCC DIRECTLY. Name: Role in conference: Degrees (if applicable), starting with most recent: Relevant positions (employment & otherwise relevant): Recent and relevant publications: Abstract of proposed paper or presentation (10-30 lines):