Undergraduate Programme and Module Handbook 2008-2009 (archived)
Module LAW3021: LABOUR LAW
Department: Law
LAW3021:
LABOUR LAW
Type |
Open |
Level |
3 |
Credits |
20 |
Availability |
Not available in 2008/09 |
Module Cap |
None. |
Location |
Durham
|
Prerequisites
- Employment Law (LAW2111) OR as a corequisite
Corequisites
- Employment Law (if not taken as a prerequisite).
Excluded Combination of Modules
Aims
- To provide students with a sound understanding of the law relating to trades unions and their members.
- To enable students to develop an insight into current issues and possible future developments in labour law.
- To provide students with the opportunity to develop proficiency with online legal research tools.
Content
- Introduction to labour law.
- General principles of industrial relations and the historical background.
- The legal status of trade unions.
- Trade union recognition and collective bargaining.
- collective bargaining and collective agreements.
- Common law and statutory intervention in internal trade union affairs.
- Freedom of association and the right to organise and bargain collectively.
- Protection against discrimination on grounds of trade union membership or activities.
- Industrial conflict and individual employees.
- Industrial conflict and the trade unions.
- Picketing and the potential civil and criminal liability of trade unions.
- The use of injunctions in industrial disputes.
Learning Outcomes
- Students should be able to demonstrate a sound understanding of the existing law on trade unions.
- Students should be able to:
- Apply the existing law to given factual scenarios and advise accordingly.
- Analyse and evaluate the existing law in light of the legal, social, economic and political questions raised.
- Engage in informed debate concerning future changes in the law.
- Students should be able to:
- Demonstrate developed analytical and writing skills, including the ability to work independently and to take responsibility for their own learning.
Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to
the learning outcomes of the module
- Lectures are used primarily to impart knowledge - and also to suggest approaches to evaluation and critical analysis;
- Tutorials will be used to develop and enhance students capacity for legal-problem solving in a particular factual situation, evaluative critical analysis and their appreciation of laws' linkage with broader fields of enquiry;
- Assignments (formative) are used both to develop problem-solving skills, the ability to engage in sustained evaluation of proposed schemes of reforms, and the ability to evaluate the law in a critical and contextual way.
- Summative assessment comprises one unseen examination of two hours fifteen minutes (including fifteen minutes reading time). The examination tests the ability to focus on relevant legal issues and organise knowledge and argument appropriate to questions raised. The examination questions will provide the means for students to demonstrate the acquisition of subject knowledge and the development of their problem-solving skills.
- Students will be supported and encouraged in the development of their research and writing skills.Students will be supported and encouraged in the development of their research and writing skills.
Teaching Methods and Learning Hours
Activity |
Number |
Frequency |
Duration |
Total/Hours |
|
Lectures |
20 |
weekly |
1 hour |
20 |
|
Tutorials |
4 |
Two per term |
1 hour |
4 |
■ |
Preparation and Reading |
|
|
|
176 |
|
Total |
|
|
|
200 |
|
Summative Assessment
Component: Examination |
Component Weighting: 100% |
Element |
Length / duration |
Element Weighting |
Resit Opportunity |
two-and-one-quarter hour written examination - including 15 minutes reading but not writing-in-the-answer-book time |
|
100% |
|
1 2000 word essay
■ Attendance at all activities marked with this symbol will be monitored. Students who fail to attend these activities, or to complete the summative or formative assessment specified above, will be subject to the procedures defined in the University's General Regulation V, and may be required to leave the University