Legal obstacles and possibilities for environmental bargaining in Australia

Author:

Schofield-Georgeson Eugene1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Technology Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Informed by an emerging discourse in environmental labour studies, this article investigates the legality of environmental bargaining in Australia. It demonstrates that existing enterprise bargaining law mostly prevents meaningful and enforceable bargaining regarding environmental issues. Proposed here instead is that more impactful possibilities for environmental bargaining exist under state Work Health and Safety (WHS) laws. In this respect, the article engages with some of the latest legal developments within the field of WHS that may enable environmental bargaining on the terms recommended by the environmental labour studies literature. It nevertheless acknowledges that such proposals may generate additional regulatory and resource burdens on regulators and workers alike. Accordingly, it concludes by canvasing a range of alternative regulatory arrangements rendering environmental bargaining more fair and effective.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Industrial relations,Business and International Management

Reference50 articles.

1. Towards a green economy through innovations: The role of trade union involvement

2. Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) (2005) A report on the 2004 national survey of health and safety representatives. Melbourne.

3. Australian Government (2009) National review into model occupational health and safety laws: second report to the workplace relations ministers’ council. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia.

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