Abstract

This paper discusses the strategies that are used by the unions to address industrial conflict at the National university of Lesotho (NUL). Content analysis was undertaken to understand the interviewee’s responses and the NUL policy documents. The strategies are analyzed within the policy context, pre-industrial action, industrial action and post-industrial action. The study also shows that unions at the higher education institutions consult with other unions in the sector and, where other strategies have failed, they resort to either industrial action or legal process to resolve conflicts at the workplace. The findings further show that unions employ widespread communication between their members to share new development in the negotiation process. The findings reveal that strategies which unions normally adopt at NUL are: constant consultations and joint decision making, strikes/industrial action, work to rule, negotiations, collective bargaining, taking legal process and communication of possible ideas and solutions.

Highlights

  • This paper discusses the strategies that are used by the unions to address industrial conflict at the National university of Lesotho (NUL)

  • The findings further show that unions employ widespread communication between their members to share new development in the negotiation process

  • The findings reveal that strategies which unions normally adopt at NUL are: constant consultations and joint decision making, strikes/industrial action, work to rule, negotiations, collective bargaining, taking legal process and communication of possible ideas and solutions

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Summary

Introduction

The study shows that unions at the higher education institutions consult with other unions in the sector and, where other strategies have failed, they resort to either industrial action or legal process to resolve conflicts at the workplace. The findings reveal that strategies which unions normally adopt at NUL are: constant consultations and joint decision making, strikes/industrial action, work to rule, negotiations, collective bargaining, taking legal process and communication of possible ideas and solutions. A number of strategies used by unions in resolving the industrial conflicts emerged. Such strategies were identified as constant consultation and joint decision making, strikes/industrial actions, work to rule, negotiations, collective bargaining, legal processes and communications of possible ideas and solutions. Such strategies were identified as constant consultation and joint decision making, strikes/industrial actions, work to rule, negotiations, collective bargaining, legal processes and communications of possible ideas and solutions. Biggs (1992) proposes the use of models that recognize that conflict-related factors interact

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