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<Publisher>
	<PublisherInfo>
		<PublisherName>Baywood Publishing Company</PublisherName>
	</PublisherInfo>
	<Journal>
		<JournalInfo JournalType="Journals">
			<JournalPrintISSN>2167-7816</JournalPrintISSN>
			<JournalElectronicISSN>2167-7824</JournalElectronicISSN>
			<JournalTitle>Journal of Collective Negotiations (formerly Journal of Collective Negotiations in the Public Sector)</JournalTitle>
			<JournalCode>BWCN</JournalCode>
			<JournalID>300318</JournalID>
			<JournalURL>http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=journal&amp;id=300318</JournalURL>
		</JournalInfo>
		<Volume>
			<VolumeInfo>
				<VolumeNumber>11</VolumeNumber>
			</VolumeInfo>
			<Issue>
				<IssueInfo IssueType="Regular">
					<IssueNumberBegin>1</IssueNumberBegin>
					<IssueNumberEnd>1</IssueNumberEnd>
					<IssueSupplement>0</IssueSupplement>
					<IssuePartStart>0</IssuePartStart>
					<IssuePartEnd>0</IssuePartEnd>
					<IssueSequence>000011000119820301</IssueSequence>
					<IssuePublicationDate>
						<CoverDate Year="1982" Month="3" Day="1"/>
						<CoverDisplay>Number 1/1982</CoverDisplay>
					</IssuePublicationDate>
					<IssueID>GKYP9WUXYYLA</IssueID>
					<IssueURL>http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=issue&amp;id=GKYP9WUXYYLA</IssueURL>
				</IssueInfo>
				<Article ArticleType="Original">
					<ArticleInfo Free="No" ESM="No">
						<ArticleDOI>10.2190/YF8G-CJ69-VY56-HL1G</ArticleDOI>
						<ArticlePII>YF8GCJ69VY56HL1G</ArticlePII>
						<ArticleSequenceNumber>0</ArticleSequenceNumber>
						<ArticleTitle Language="En">THE IMPACT OF LABOR-MANAGEMENT COOPERATION COMMITTEES ON PERSONNEL POLICIES AND PRACTICES AT TWENTY FEDERAL BARGAINING UNITS</ArticleTitle>
						<ArticleFirstPage/>
						<ArticleLastPage/>
						<ArticleHistory>
							<RegistrationDate>20020509</RegistrationDate>
							<ReceivedDate>20020509</ReceivedDate>
							<Accepted>20020509</Accepted>
							<OnlineDate>20020509</OnlineDate>
						</ArticleHistory>
						<FullTextURL>http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=contribution&amp;id=YF8GCJ69VY56HL1G</FullTextURL>
						<Composite>1</Composite>
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					<ArticleHeader>
						<AuthorGroup>
							<Author>
								<GivenName>GEORGE T. SULZNER</GivenName>
								<Initials/>
								<FamilyName/>
								<Degrees/>
								<Roles/>
							</Author>
						</AuthorGroup>
						<Abstract Language="En">Joint labor-management committees are thought of increasingly as vehicles for dealing effectively with problems of government productivity and service delivery. At the federal level, joint general purpose cooperation committees seem to have the most potential for performing a problem-solving function in these areas of concern. However, they are rare (only one in four bargaining units have them) and seem to be influential only in large units which represent a vary small fraction of the total federal labor-management settings. Moreover, similarly with joint committees at other levels of government and in the private sector, they appear to be more effective in dealing with issues that do not threaten the adversarial positions of the parties.</Abstract>
					</ArticleHeader>
				</Article>
			</Issue>
		</Volume>
	</Journal>
</Publisher>
