Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6973520> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 44 of
44
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6973520 subject Q7001677.
- Q6973520 subject Q8157667.
- Q6973520 subject Q8159409.
- Q6973520 subject Q8579657.
- Q6973520 abstract "The National Industrial Relations Court (NIRC) was established on 1 December 1971 under Section 99 of the Industrial Relations Act 1971. The NIRC was created by the Conservative government of Ted Heath as a way to limit the power of trades union in the United Kingdom. It was empowered to grant injunctions as necessary to prevent injurious strikes and also to settle a variety of labour disputes. It also heard appeals from the Industrial tribunals. Unusually, its jurisdiction extended throughout the UK, making no distinction between England and Wales or Scotland. Its first and only President was John Donaldson, supported by John Brightman (both High Court judges who later became Law Lords) and Lord Thomson, a judge of the Scottish Court of Session. The court also had nine appointed lay members, and one of the three judges sat with a lay panel. The court hearings were in public, but its procedure was relatively informal, with neither the judge nor barristers wearing wigs or gowns.The NIRC was controversial throughout its short life. Donaldson, the president of the court, was known to have Conservative leanings, having stood as a Parliamentary candidate for the Conservative party and, indeed, having contributed to the drafting of the Industrial Relations Act. Many cases were decided against the trades unions, although the unions had a policy of not co-operating with, and in many cases ignoring, the court. In July 1972, a dispute involving the dock workers union led to five shop stewards being imprisoned in Pentonville Prison for contempt of court. Unofficial strike action in support of the Pentonville Five created a national crisis, only averted when the Official Solicitor (advised by John Vinelott, later a High Court judge) appealed the arrests to the Court of Appeal, who ordered their release. A dispute involving the Amalgamated Union of Engineering Workers also led to a finding of contempt of court, a substantial fine, and an order for the sequestration of the assets of the union (although the fine was ultimately paid anonymously). The NIRC was abolished by the Trade Union and Labour Relations Act 1974 soon after the Labour government of Harold Wilson came to power in 1974. One of the leading legal decisions of the NIRC was Norton Tool Co Ltd v Tewson [1972] ICR, in which Donaldson J ruled that damages for wrongful dismissal only extended to financial loss, and that compensation was not available for non-pecuniary losses, such as injury to pride or feelings. This position was doubted by Lord Hoffmann in Johnson v Unisys Ltd [2003] 1 AC 518, but upheld in Dunnachie v Kingston-upon-Hull City Council [2004] UKHL 36.".
- Q6973520 wikiPageExternalLink chapter_21.html.
- Q6973520 wikiPageExternalLink chapter27.htm.
- Q6973520 wikiPageExternalLink 292d0200.htm.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q1156248.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q128956.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q128967.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q145.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q1504639.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q1518641.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q1617747.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q1700103.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q178790.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q1818985.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q22.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q22909834.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q4739348.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q49776.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q5178407.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q6027712.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q610320.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q6262019.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q627718.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q6495575.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q661356.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q7001677.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q7079573.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q708562.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q7165271.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q7832005.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q808967.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q8157667.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q8159409.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q8579657.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q868283.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q9626.
- Q6973520 wikiPageWikiLink Q9630.
- Q6973520 comment "The National Industrial Relations Court (NIRC) was established on 1 December 1971 under Section 99 of the Industrial Relations Act 1971. The NIRC was created by the Conservative government of Ted Heath as a way to limit the power of trades union in the United Kingdom. It was empowered to grant injunctions as necessary to prevent injurious strikes and also to settle a variety of labour disputes. It also heard appeals from the Industrial tribunals.".
- Q6973520 label "National Industrial Relations Court".
- Q6973520 homepage chapter27.htm.