A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution

Includes bibliographical references (leaves 63-65). === The choice of a labour market regulatory system in any given social context is crucial for the economic development of that country. In South Africa, a challenge has been made to the key players in the labour environment to choose whether the p...

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Main Author: Dlamini, Bongani Sydney
Other Authors: Kalula, Evance
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14012
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-140122020-10-06T05:10:58Z A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution Dlamini, Bongani Sydney Kalula, Evance Commercial Law Includes bibliographical references (leaves 63-65). The choice of a labour market regulatory system in any given social context is crucial for the economic development of that country. In South Africa, a challenge has been made to the key players in the labour environment to choose whether the primary focus should be on creating better jobs or whether the main challenge should be in creating many or more jobs (Baskin: 2004). These two conflicting interests, though almost intertwined to each other, are however standing on a separate footing. Of late in South Africa, there have been cries for an urgent need to deregulate the labour market in the quest to create more jobs and free the small and medium businesses to participate in the economy without stringent measures. Concern has been raised about the unavailability of jobs for the people of South Africa. The major challenge facing the Government is the need to create more jobs. In Swaziland, the problem of job scarcity is reaching a crisis level. A large section of the economically active population is unemployed. Previously, Swaziland was considered to be an ideal place to conduct business by many enterprises in Southern Africa. The new political dispensation in South Africa and the political stability in Mozambique have brought about a sudden and devastating effect on Swaziland. Businesses are closing down operations and very few enterprises are showing an interest to invest in that country. This notwithstanding, Swaziland has opted to use South Africa's system of labour market regulation. The essence of the paper will be to examine the choice of the labour market regulatory systems between these two countries and to try to establish the successes and failures of each system in its given context. The main focus will be on the dispute resolution mechanism that each system adopts and whether such system works well given the cultural, social, economic and political dispensation of that country. The institutions that will be discussed are the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA), the Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration Commission (CMAC), the Labour Court and the Industrial Court. At a later stage, the discussion takes a twist and focuses on the competing and overlapping jurisdiction between the labour dispute resolution systems as set out in labour legislations on the one hand, and the common law power of the High Courts to decide on labour related matters on the other hand. The idea is to shed some light on the difficulties that may arise if the jurisdictional problems are not resolved and that this may in turn impact negatively on the labour market regulatory systems. 2015-09-15T10:32:19Z 2015-09-15T10:32:19Z 2004 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14012 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Law Department of Commercial Law
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Commercial Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Dlamini, Bongani Sydney
A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 63-65). === The choice of a labour market regulatory system in any given social context is crucial for the economic development of that country. In South Africa, a challenge has been made to the key players in the labour environment to choose whether the primary focus should be on creating better jobs or whether the main challenge should be in creating many or more jobs (Baskin: 2004). These two conflicting interests, though almost intertwined to each other, are however standing on a separate footing. Of late in South Africa, there have been cries for an urgent need to deregulate the labour market in the quest to create more jobs and free the small and medium businesses to participate in the economy without stringent measures. Concern has been raised about the unavailability of jobs for the people of South Africa. The major challenge facing the Government is the need to create more jobs. In Swaziland, the problem of job scarcity is reaching a crisis level. A large section of the economically active population is unemployed. Previously, Swaziland was considered to be an ideal place to conduct business by many enterprises in Southern Africa. The new political dispensation in South Africa and the political stability in Mozambique have brought about a sudden and devastating effect on Swaziland. Businesses are closing down operations and very few enterprises are showing an interest to invest in that country. This notwithstanding, Swaziland has opted to use South Africa's system of labour market regulation. The essence of the paper will be to examine the choice of the labour market regulatory systems between these two countries and to try to establish the successes and failures of each system in its given context. The main focus will be on the dispute resolution mechanism that each system adopts and whether such system works well given the cultural, social, economic and political dispensation of that country. The institutions that will be discussed are the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA), the Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration Commission (CMAC), the Labour Court and the Industrial Court. At a later stage, the discussion takes a twist and focuses on the competing and overlapping jurisdiction between the labour dispute resolution systems as set out in labour legislations on the one hand, and the common law power of the High Courts to decide on labour related matters on the other hand. The idea is to shed some light on the difficulties that may arise if the jurisdictional problems are not resolved and that this may in turn impact negatively on the labour market regulatory systems.
author2 Kalula, Evance
author_facet Kalula, Evance
Dlamini, Bongani Sydney
author Dlamini, Bongani Sydney
author_sort Dlamini, Bongani Sydney
title A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
title_short A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
title_full A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
title_fullStr A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of the South African and Swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
title_sort comparison of the south african and swaziland's labour market regulatory systems in dispute resolution
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14012
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