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Non-Union Employee Representation in AustraliaA Case Study of the Suncorp Metway Employee Council Inc. (SMEC)Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand,ray.markey{at}aut.ac.nz Non-union representative employee participation recently has attracted increasing international attention in employment relations due to the growing representation gap in many countries as union membership declines, and mounting evidence of the benefits of representative employee participation for enterprise flexibility and efficiency. However, relatively little is known about Australian experiments in employee participation, although it is essential to learn from Australian experience in order to develop effective public policy. This case study represents a contribution to this larger project. SMEC is a non-union employee representative body that has adopted a European works council organizational model. The case study evaluates SMEC's effectiveness as a non-union form of representative employee participation. It concludes that the opportunities for the formation of genuinely independent works council style organs of employee participation remain severely constrained by the current Australian regulatory environment, which tends to encourage a union substitution role.
Key Words: Australia employee representation unions works councils
Journal of Industrial Relations, Vol. 49, No. 2,
187-209 (2007) This article has been cited by other articles:
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