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126 Int'l Lab. Rev. 179 (1987)
Mediation, Conciliation and Arbitration - An International Comparison of Australia, Great Britain and the United States

handle is hein.journals/intlr126 and id is 193 raw text is: International Labour Review, Vol. 126, No. 2, March-April 1987

Mediation, conciliation and
arbitration
An international comparison of Australia,
Great Britain and the United States
Nicholas BLAIN, John GOODMAN and Joseph LOEWENBERG *
I. Introduction
There are relatively few international comparative studies of mediation,
conciliation and arbitration.' This article addresses three questions. What are
the distinctive features of these processes in the public and private sectors in
Australia, Great Britain and the United States? What are the main
similarities and differences between them in the three countries? Why do
such similarities and differences exist? We focus mainly on the first two
questions and conclude by considering the third. These particular countries
were chosen for study partly because they have a common cultural tradition
and language but also because they have developed clearly diverging
industrial relations practices.
Since mediation, conciliation and arbitration are frequently defined and
interpreted in different ways, it is important to indicate how they are used
here. Broadly speaking, we use the terms mediation and conciliation
interchangeably to mean the intercession of an outsider or third party to
assist parties in resolving labour disputes. By arbitration we mean the
hearing and deciding of issues in labour disputes by an independent third
party. The meaning of the three terms will be elaborated in relation to the
particular country contexts; for the moment it need only be said that all three
processes may be voluntary or compulsory.
Before going on to consider the practical operation of these processes
and the context in which it takes place, it may be useful to sketch in very
briefly some of the main features characterising the three national systems.
* Senior Lecturer in Industrial Relations at the University of Western Australia; Frank
Thomas Professor of Industrial Relations at the University of Manchester Institute of Science
and Technology; and Professor of Industrial Relations at Temple University, Philadelphia. We
are especially grateful to Dr. Joe Isaac and David Plowman for valuable comments, to Kerry
Evans for very useful research assistance, and to the Department of Industrial Relations at the
University of Western Australia for financial support. This is an abridged and revised version of
a paper prepared for the World Congress of the International Industrial Relations Association,
Hamburg, September 1986.

Copyright © International Labour Organisation 1987

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