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Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership

Although the LRA and the Constitution understand that conflict is inevitable in the relationship between employer and employee, it is not conflict of such a violent nature, as has become associated with the process of striking in recent times, which they are referring to and intending to permit. Des...

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Main Author: Chennels, Jack
Other Authors: Fergus, Emma
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Institute of Development and Labour Law 2026
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Chennels, Jack
author2 Fergus, Emma
author_browse Chennels, Jack
Fergus, Emma
author_facet Fergus, Emma
Chennels, Jack
author_sort Chennels, Jack
collection Thesis
description Although the LRA and the Constitution understand that conflict is inevitable in the relationship between employer and employee, it is not conflict of such a violent nature, as has become associated with the process of striking in recent times, which they are referring to and intending to permit. Despite how it has been perceived by the courts and by commentators generally, the threat which conflict under the LRA aimed to allow is the threat of the peaceful with-holding of labour. Strike related violence and bad faith negotiation tactics have been on the rise in South Africa and it is not unusual for parties across the negotiation table from each other to accuse their opposition of some form of misdirection and bad faith, or for animosity to become even more prevalent once an agreement has been reached due to the manner in which the negotiations were conducted. Cheadle states that “it is one of the ironies of collective bargaining that its very object, industrial peace, should depend on the threat of conflict.” He does go on to add that the difference to international standards and expectations comes in how the LRA requires no implicit need for strikes to be preceded by good faith negotiations whereas conventional labour relations does.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43206 Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership Chennels, Jack Fergus, Emma Labour Law Although the LRA and the Constitution understand that conflict is inevitable in the relationship between employer and employee, it is not conflict of such a violent nature, as has become associated with the process of striking in recent times, which they are referring to and intending to permit. Despite how it has been perceived by the courts and by commentators generally, the threat which conflict under the LRA aimed to allow is the threat of the peaceful with-holding of labour. Strike related violence and bad faith negotiation tactics have been on the rise in South Africa and it is not unusual for parties across the negotiation table from each other to accuse their opposition of some form of misdirection and bad faith, or for animosity to become even more prevalent once an agreement has been reached due to the manner in which the negotiations were conducted. Cheadle states that “it is one of the ironies of collective bargaining that its very object, industrial peace, should depend on the threat of conflict.” He does go on to add that the difference to international standards and expectations comes in how the LRA requires no implicit need for strikes to be preceded by good faith negotiations whereas conventional labour relations does. 2026-05-08T10:05:15Z 2026-05-08T10:05:15Z 2014 2026-05-08T10:03:16Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43206 en eng application/pdf Institute of Development and Labour Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Labour Law
Chennels, Jack
Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership
title_full Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership
title_fullStr Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership
title_full_unstemmed Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership
title_short Corporate governance and labour relations: a sustainable partnership
title_sort corporate governance and labour relations a sustainable partnership
topic Labour Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43206
work_keys_str_mv AT chennelsjack corporategovernanceandlabourrelationsasustainablepartnership