Control Council Law No 22
Control Council Law No 22, Works Councils (10 April 1946) was a German labour law drafted in Allied-occupied Germany by the Military Government, to enable organisation of work councils in rebuilding the economy and society after World War Two. Work councils, which employees of a firm organised and elected democratically to determine workplace issues, had existed in Germany in various forms since 1889. They had been abolished by Adolf Hitler's Nazi party.[1] The new Control Council Law No 22 provided a template for democratic German trade unions to reorganise through collective agreements with employers.
Contents
The key provisions of the new Law were articles I and V, empowering trade unions to organise work councils, and providing a template set of rights for elected representatives.
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The organization and activities of Works Councils (Betriebsräte) to represent the professional, economic and social interests of the workers and employees in each individual enterprise are hereby permitted throughout Germany. [...]
1. Works Councils may have as their basic functions any of the following matters relating to the protection of the interests of the workers and employees of an enterprise except insofar as these matters are governed by or are subject to any restriction by regulations having the force of law:
2. Each Works Council shall determine its specific functions and procedure within the limits set forth in this law. |
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Development
The Control Council Law No 22 was replaced by a more comprehensive Betriebsrätegesetz 1952 (Work Councils Act 1952) once the new German constitution had passed in 1949, and a democratic government had been elected.
See also
- Codetermination
- European labour law
- United States labor law
- United Kingdom labour law
- French labour law
Notes
- ↑ See E McGaughey, 'The Codetermination Bargains: The History of German Corporate and Labour Law' (2015) LSE Legal Studies Working Paper No. 10/2015
References
- E McGaughey, 'The Codetermination Bargains: The History of German Corporate and Labour Law' (2015) LSE Legal Studies Working Paper No. 10/2015