Thursday, October 24, 2013 - 4:10pm to Friday, October 25, 2013 - 5:55pm
Location: 
Solarium (Room FA2) - Falconer Hall, 84 Queen's Park

GLOBALIZATION, LAW & JUSTICE WORKSHOP

presents

Harry Arthurs
York University
 
Making Bricks Out of Straw:
The Creation of a Transnational Labour Regime

Thursday, October 24, 2013
4:10 - 6:00
Solarium (Room FA2) - Falconer Hall
84 Queen's Park

The creation of a regime of transnational labour regulation has been frustrated by the decline or disappearance of almost all its necessary ingredients:  strong regulation-minded states, national manufacturing-based economies,  a strong labour movement organized around working class identities and  "hard" labour law.  If workplace and labour market regulation is to  survive, it will have somehow to meet the  challenge of expanding its  intellectual  ambition, its clientele and its spatial reach.

University Professor, former Dean of Osgoode Hall Law School (1972-77) and President of York University (1985-92), Harry Arthurs has also been an academic visitor at several Canadian, British and Commonwealth universities.  Arthurs’ publications range widely over the areas of legal education and the legal profession, legal history and legal theory, labour and administrative law, globalization and constitutionalism. His academic contributions have been recognized by his election as an Associate of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy.  He was awarded the Canada Council’s Killam Prize for his lifetime contributions to the social sciences (2002), the Bora Laskin Prize for his contributions to labour law (2003) and the International Labour Organization's Decent Work Research Prize (jointly with Joseph Stiglitz) (2008).  Arthurs has been an arbitrator and mediator in labour disputes, has conducted inquiries and reviews at Canadian and American universities, and has provided advice to governments on a number of issues ranging from higher education policy to the constitution to labour and employment law.  Recently, he has chaired reviews of Canada's labour standards legislation (2004-2006), Ontario's pension legislation (2006-2008) and the funding of Ontario's workplace safety and insurance system (2010-2012).  He has also served as a Bencher of the Law Society of Upper Canada, member of the Economic Council of Canada and President of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.

Refreshments will be provided. 

 

For more workshop information, please contact Nadia Gulezko at n.gulezko@utoronto.ca.