Danbury Hatters in Sweden: An American Warning Against Punitive Damages for Workers’ ‘Illegal’ Collective Action, a new paper by César Rosado Marzán and Margot A. Nikitas, is now available on SSRN. The paper is currently under review by the International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations. Read the abstract below:
The European Court of Justice Laval quartet of cases held that worker collective actions that impacted freedom of services and establishment in the EU violated EU law. After Laval, The Swedish Labour Court imposed “exemplary,” or punitive damages, on labour unions for violating EU law. This article contributes to this discussion with a US perspective on the issue of punitive damages for workers’ violations of rules corresponding to strikes and similar collective actions. The US’ experience warns against the imposition of punitive damages. Punitive damages may not only be unfair for workers, but may cause unions to become too risk adverse and, in this manner, lead them to fail to adequately represent workers. Moreover, workers’ collective actions should be understood as activities commensurate with market freedoms, absent additional showings of violent or similar means by the collective actors. The Swedish Labour Court’s decision therefore seems to fare ill for equity, freedom of association, markets and Social Europe.
Download the paper on SSRN here.
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