Description

Book Synopsis
John Dunlop assumed the office of secretary of labor with a stern warning about the creeping menace of over-regulation. A mounting tide of red tape was creating a backlash among the people who were on the receiving end of all of these rules, breeding a climate of hostility that would make it all but impossible to solve the nation's most pressing problems.

Dunlop's cautionary words, delivered nearly five decades ago, seem eerily prescient today as resentment against elites fuels a right-wing populist rebellion in the US and beyond. Yet even as he feared for the future, Dunlop was intent on demonstrating that it was possible to craft lasting solutions to seemingly intractable problems: soaring health-care costs; racial inequity in the workplace and higher education; the lack of basic labor protections for whole categories of workers; and the loss of manufacturing jobs to globalization and automation.

Whatever the specific problem he was called upon to help solve, Du

Trade Review
More Worlds to Negotiate beautifully illustrates John Dunlop’s approach to problem solving through a series of fascinating accounts of the complicated social challenges he helped navigate in his long and storied life. Jennifer Berkshire deftly chronicles Dunlop’s ongoing search to engage people with strongly opposing views to create multi-party “mechanisms” that addressed what often seemed intractable dilemmas. Dunlop’s approach offers a hopeful message and guidance to facing the social policy problems of our own fraught times. -- David Weil, Dean and Professor, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University and former Obama administration Wage and Hour Administrator, US Department of Labor
Jennifer Berkshire captures John Dunlop as the modern man he was: his sweeping curiosity, his habit of listening to previously unheard voices, his ability to bring parties together of different races, genders, socioeconomic classes and cultures. This book is a history, but also a relevant manual for those interested in solving entrenched and thorny problems today. -- Kris Rondeau, Director, AFSCME New England Organizing Project
John Dunlop was a master facilitator and an astute problem solver whose techniques offer a roadmap for addressing today’s most intractable policy issues. -- Karen Ignagni, President/CEO EmblemHealth

This book is a must read for anyone working in the worlds of industrial and labor relations and for anyone who has to negotiate as part of their role in business, government, or the broader community. Jennifer C. Berkshire has done a wonderful job outlining the attitudes, models, and negotiating techniques deployed by John Dunlop across his illustrious career.

-- Brendan Crotty, Deputy General Secretary of the Queensland Teachers' Union

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments

Introduction: What Would Dunlop Do?

Chapter 1 Harvard Wars

Chapter 2 Out of Control

Chapter 3 Tour of Duty

Chapter 4 Dead on Arrival

Chapter 5 At the Table

Chapter 6 Back to the Future of Work

Chapter 7 Cucumbers and Tomatoes

Chapter 8 A Stitch in Time

Chapter 9 A Union at Harvard

Chapter 10 Joint Problem Solving

Conclusion: A Many Storied Life

References

Index

About the Author

More Worlds to Negotiate John Dunlop and the Art

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    A Paperback by Jennifer C. Berkshire

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      View other formats and editions of More Worlds to Negotiate John Dunlop and the Art by Jennifer C. Berkshire

      Publisher: Hamilton Books
      Publication Date: 12/15/2020 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780761872597, 978-0761872597
      ISBN10: 0761872590

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      John Dunlop assumed the office of secretary of labor with a stern warning about the creeping menace of over-regulation. A mounting tide of red tape was creating a backlash among the people who were on the receiving end of all of these rules, breeding a climate of hostility that would make it all but impossible to solve the nation's most pressing problems.

      Dunlop's cautionary words, delivered nearly five decades ago, seem eerily prescient today as resentment against elites fuels a right-wing populist rebellion in the US and beyond. Yet even as he feared for the future, Dunlop was intent on demonstrating that it was possible to craft lasting solutions to seemingly intractable problems: soaring health-care costs; racial inequity in the workplace and higher education; the lack of basic labor protections for whole categories of workers; and the loss of manufacturing jobs to globalization and automation.

      Whatever the specific problem he was called upon to help solve, Du

      Trade Review
      More Worlds to Negotiate beautifully illustrates John Dunlop’s approach to problem solving through a series of fascinating accounts of the complicated social challenges he helped navigate in his long and storied life. Jennifer Berkshire deftly chronicles Dunlop’s ongoing search to engage people with strongly opposing views to create multi-party “mechanisms” that addressed what often seemed intractable dilemmas. Dunlop’s approach offers a hopeful message and guidance to facing the social policy problems of our own fraught times. -- David Weil, Dean and Professor, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University and former Obama administration Wage and Hour Administrator, US Department of Labor
      Jennifer Berkshire captures John Dunlop as the modern man he was: his sweeping curiosity, his habit of listening to previously unheard voices, his ability to bring parties together of different races, genders, socioeconomic classes and cultures. This book is a history, but also a relevant manual for those interested in solving entrenched and thorny problems today. -- Kris Rondeau, Director, AFSCME New England Organizing Project
      John Dunlop was a master facilitator and an astute problem solver whose techniques offer a roadmap for addressing today’s most intractable policy issues. -- Karen Ignagni, President/CEO EmblemHealth

      This book is a must read for anyone working in the worlds of industrial and labor relations and for anyone who has to negotiate as part of their role in business, government, or the broader community. Jennifer C. Berkshire has done a wonderful job outlining the attitudes, models, and negotiating techniques deployed by John Dunlop across his illustrious career.

      -- Brendan Crotty, Deputy General Secretary of the Queensland Teachers' Union

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments

      Introduction: What Would Dunlop Do?

      Chapter 1 Harvard Wars

      Chapter 2 Out of Control

      Chapter 3 Tour of Duty

      Chapter 4 Dead on Arrival

      Chapter 5 At the Table

      Chapter 6 Back to the Future of Work

      Chapter 7 Cucumbers and Tomatoes

      Chapter 8 A Stitch in Time

      Chapter 9 A Union at Harvard

      Chapter 10 Joint Problem Solving

      Conclusion: A Many Storied Life

      References

      Index

      About the Author

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