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Collaborative bargaining

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Collaborative bargaining is a style of negotiation which recognises the interests of the other party and emphasises cooperation between them. It was especially promoted, practised and studied in the negotiations between school districts and teaching unions in the United States in the 1990s. It is compared and contrasted with more adversarial models of collective bargaining in which the parties may regard each other as enemies.[1]

References

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  1. ^ Gregory Paul Sampson-Gruener (2009), "Collaborative Bargaining vs. Collective Bargaining", An empirical analysis of educator beliefs related to post-industrial labor reforms in the State of Oregon, pp. 41–44, ISBN 978-1-109-04294-8