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Constitutionalizing Employment Relations: Sinzheimer, Kahn‐Freund, and the Role of Labour Law
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2008
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European LawLabor RelationConstitutional LawLawEuropean Private LawEconomic HistoryFederal Labor RelationsIndustrial RelationLabor Process StudiesLabour StudyFederal Labor LawPolitical ScienceEconomicsPublic PolicyEmployment LawAutonomous RegulationLabor RelationsBritish Labour LawHugo SinzheimerLabor EconomicsEmployment RelationsLabour LawBusinessLabor LawUnemployment
Hugo Sinzheimer and his one‐time student Otto Kahn‐Freund are widely regarded as the founding fathers of German and British labour law respectively. While, at first glance, the two scholars might appear to have advocated rather different approaches to the regulation of employment relations, a review of their work reveals that both argued, in essence, for the ‘constitutionalization’ of those relations. Both argued, in other words, for the removal from the economic sphere of the otherwise inequitable consequences of the functioning of private law, so that collectivized labour might participate with capital, on a parity basis, in the autonomous regulation of the economy.