Ulteriori informazioni
Labour Law, now in its third edition, is a well established text which offers a comprehensive and critical account of the subject by a team of leading labour lawyers. It examines both collective labour relations and individual employment rights, including equality law, and does so while having full regard to the international labour standards as well as the implications of Brexit. Case studies and reports from government and other public agencies illuminate the text to show how the law works in practice, ensuring that students acquire not only a sophisticated knowledge of the law but also an appreciation of its purpose and the complexity of the issues which it addresses.
Info autore
Hugh Collins is Cassel Professor of Commercial Law at the School of Law, London School of Economics, Fellow of the British Academy, and Emeritus Vinerian Professor of English Law at All Souls College, Oxford. He is author of more than 20 books including Justice in Dismissal (1992), Foundations of Indirect Discrimination Law (with T Khaitan, 2018) Philosophical Foundations of Labour Law (with G Lester, V Mantouvalou, 2018), Human Rights at Work (with A Bogg, ACL Davies, V Mantouvalou, 2024).K. D. Ewing is Professor of Public Law at King's College, London. He is President of the Institute of Employment Rights; President of the Campaign for Trade Union Freedom; and Vice President of the International Centre for Trade Union Rights. He has taught labour law for over forty years at undergraduate and postgraduate level at several universities in the United Kingdom (Edinburgh, Cambridge and London), as well as in Australia (Melbourne, Monash, Queensland, Sydney and UWA), and Canada (Osgoode Hall Law School).Aileen McColgan is a Specialist in human rights, discrimination, public and labour law. Aileen McColgan KC was formerly Professor of Human Rights Law at King's College London, and Professor of Law and Social Justice at the University of Leeds. She taught labour law at undergraduate and postgraduate level.