A comparison between the South African and Kenyan labour law systems
- Authors: Munuve, Lilian Kasyoka
- Date: 2008
- Subjects: Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Labor laws and legislation -- Kenya , Labor law -- South Africa , Labor law -- Kenya
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , LLM
- Identifier: vital:10205 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/752 , Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Labor laws and legislation -- Kenya , Labor law -- South Africa , Labor law -- Kenya
- Description: Labour law is a system of rules regulating the labour force in the society. These rules of labour are legal rules and are legally enforceable which means that if there is a breach of rules a party may approach a court of law or any other institution to obtain relief in respect of the breach of the rules. As a large percentage of the population at any given time in the world is involved with employment relationship, the labour relationships between employer and employee cannot be ignored as it affects both socio-economic and political factors in our society. Labour Law in general focuses on various relationships, including the relationship between the employer and employee, between the employer and a trade union or a group of employees, employers and employers’ organization. From the foregoing it can be deduced that there are two components of labour law which must be distinguished, namely individual and collective labour. The individual relationship focuses on the relationship between the employer and the employee while collective labour laws deal with matters such as legal nature of trade unions (and employers’ organization), the legal nature and enforceability of collective agreements, collective bargaining institutions and the legal consequences that flow from strikes, lock outs and other forms of industrial action. Collective labour law can therefore be said to be the body of rules which regulates the following collective relationships between: • employees and the trade union they belong to • employers and employers’ organization • employers and /or employers organization and trade unions • the government and trade unions • the government and employers organization However the collective labour law cannot be said to be absolute but is interdependent with individual labour law because the collectively agreed terms become part of the individual employment relation. This study mainly focuses on the collective labour aspect of the labour law system which shall be discussed in detail in the chapters to follow.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2008
- Authors: Munuve, Lilian Kasyoka
- Date: 2008
- Subjects: Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Labor laws and legislation -- Kenya , Labor law -- South Africa , Labor law -- Kenya
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , LLM
- Identifier: vital:10205 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/752 , Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Labor laws and legislation -- Kenya , Labor law -- South Africa , Labor law -- Kenya
- Description: Labour law is a system of rules regulating the labour force in the society. These rules of labour are legal rules and are legally enforceable which means that if there is a breach of rules a party may approach a court of law or any other institution to obtain relief in respect of the breach of the rules. As a large percentage of the population at any given time in the world is involved with employment relationship, the labour relationships between employer and employee cannot be ignored as it affects both socio-economic and political factors in our society. Labour Law in general focuses on various relationships, including the relationship between the employer and employee, between the employer and a trade union or a group of employees, employers and employers’ organization. From the foregoing it can be deduced that there are two components of labour law which must be distinguished, namely individual and collective labour. The individual relationship focuses on the relationship between the employer and the employee while collective labour laws deal with matters such as legal nature of trade unions (and employers’ organization), the legal nature and enforceability of collective agreements, collective bargaining institutions and the legal consequences that flow from strikes, lock outs and other forms of industrial action. Collective labour law can therefore be said to be the body of rules which regulates the following collective relationships between: • employees and the trade union they belong to • employers and employers’ organization • employers and /or employers organization and trade unions • the government and trade unions • the government and employers organization However the collective labour law cannot be said to be absolute but is interdependent with individual labour law because the collectively agreed terms become part of the individual employment relation. This study mainly focuses on the collective labour aspect of the labour law system which shall be discussed in detail in the chapters to follow.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2008
The application of section 197 of the Labour Relations Act in an outsourcing context
- Authors: Biggs, Lynn
- Date: 2008
- Subjects: South Africa. Labour Relations Act (1995) , Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Contracting out -- Law and legislation -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , LLM
- Identifier: vital:10193 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/751 , South Africa. Labour Relations Act (1995) , Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Contracting out -- Law and legislation -- South Africa
- Description: Section 197 of the Labour Relations Act (LRA) in both its original form and in its current form caused much confusion and debate. Originally it was interpreted that section 197 allowed for the automatic transfer of employees in cases where there was a transfer of the whole or part of a business, trade or undertaking as a going concern. That meant that the contracts of employment transfer to the new owner and that the employees could not refuse to be transferred. Various judges were tasked with interpreting this section in its original form and thus different interpretations emerged with the Labour Appeal Court ultimately deciding in the NEHAWU v University of Cape Town matter that employers involved in the transfer can decide between them, not to transfer the employees. The LAC further held that “outsourcing” does not necessarily entail a transfer of a business. Section 197 was amended in 2002 and the effect of the provisions is that the old employer is not required to seek the consent of the employees before their contracts are transferred and that the employment contracts transfer automatically. However, the current section has also raised some difficulties especially relating to: when does a transfer of a business as a going concern take place; what constitutes a “business”; when is an entity part of a business, trade, undertaking or service? A more glaring controversy relates to whether section 197 applies to “second-generation contracting out or outsourcing”. All provisions of the LRA should be interpreted in the context to advance economic development, social justice, labour peace and democratisation of the workplace. One of the primary objects of the LRA is to give effect to and to regulate the fundamental rights of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. Thus section 197 is to be interpreted in light of the objectives of the LRA as well as to promote the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. The common law and international law are both important sources of comparison. The common law allows employers who transfer businesses free to decide whether or not the transfer will include the employees of the transferor. International law, particularly the European Union and the United Kingdom, favour the approach that when an entity is transferred, it retains its identity after the transfer and the safeguarding of employee rights in the context of business transfers. European and English jurisprudence have shown that almost any combination of events can constitute a transfer of a business.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2008
- Authors: Biggs, Lynn
- Date: 2008
- Subjects: South Africa. Labour Relations Act (1995) , Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Contracting out -- Law and legislation -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , LLM
- Identifier: vital:10193 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/751 , South Africa. Labour Relations Act (1995) , Labor laws and legislation -- South Africa , Contracting out -- Law and legislation -- South Africa
- Description: Section 197 of the Labour Relations Act (LRA) in both its original form and in its current form caused much confusion and debate. Originally it was interpreted that section 197 allowed for the automatic transfer of employees in cases where there was a transfer of the whole or part of a business, trade or undertaking as a going concern. That meant that the contracts of employment transfer to the new owner and that the employees could not refuse to be transferred. Various judges were tasked with interpreting this section in its original form and thus different interpretations emerged with the Labour Appeal Court ultimately deciding in the NEHAWU v University of Cape Town matter that employers involved in the transfer can decide between them, not to transfer the employees. The LAC further held that “outsourcing” does not necessarily entail a transfer of a business. Section 197 was amended in 2002 and the effect of the provisions is that the old employer is not required to seek the consent of the employees before their contracts are transferred and that the employment contracts transfer automatically. However, the current section has also raised some difficulties especially relating to: when does a transfer of a business as a going concern take place; what constitutes a “business”; when is an entity part of a business, trade, undertaking or service? A more glaring controversy relates to whether section 197 applies to “second-generation contracting out or outsourcing”. All provisions of the LRA should be interpreted in the context to advance economic development, social justice, labour peace and democratisation of the workplace. One of the primary objects of the LRA is to give effect to and to regulate the fundamental rights of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. Thus section 197 is to be interpreted in light of the objectives of the LRA as well as to promote the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. The common law and international law are both important sources of comparison. The common law allows employers who transfer businesses free to decide whether or not the transfer will include the employees of the transferor. International law, particularly the European Union and the United Kingdom, favour the approach that when an entity is transferred, it retains its identity after the transfer and the safeguarding of employee rights in the context of business transfers. European and English jurisprudence have shown that almost any combination of events can constitute a transfer of a business.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2008
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