Module 1 Labour Jurispudence History
Module 1 Labour Jurispudence History
Module 1 Labour Jurispudence History
Presented by:
Nikita Begum Talukdar
● There was important progress made in labour legislation in the immediate post-World
War I period, pointing specifically to the influence of several International Labour
Organisation (ILO) conventions and the Royal Commission on Labour in the 1920s
as major advances.
● Several factors had combined to alter the industrial and political landscape, including
the emergence of a strong nationalist movement, the rapid development of trade
unions (most importantly the formation of the All India Trade Union Congress in
1920),
● At the same time, the newly created International Labour Organization began to have
an influence on labour policy in India
● Typical protective legislation of the period includes the Factories Act 1922,
the Mines Act 1922, and the Workmen’s Compensation Act 1923, much of it
● Two further enactments in this period point to what has been described as the
relations: the Trade Unions Act 1926 and the Trade Disputes Act 1929.
● The Trade Unions Act 1926 provided for the registration of trade unions, gave
unions a legal status, and extended some protections against civil and criminal
liability in the course of industrial disputes.
● The Trade Disputes Act 1929 placed severe limitations upon the right to
strike, and provided for the compulsory reference of industrial disputes to a
conciliation board or a court of enquiry. The outcomes of the reference, however,
were not binding upon the parties.
● Both pieces of legislation were strongly criticized by sections of the trade union
movement, including the All India Trade Union Congress.
Lets Sum Up:
● Regulation in the World War II period appears against the background of considerable
industrial unrest and strike action against the conditions and effects of the war itself.
These circumstances brought into being several pieces of legislation (at central
and state level) designed to secure labour co-operation in support of the war
effort.
● This legislation included passage in 1941 of s. 49A of the Bombay Industrial
Disputes Act, granting power to the Bombay government to refer industrial disputes
to compulsory arbitration by an Industrial Court, and banning all strikes and
lockouts prior to arbitration.
● Other relevant legislation included the central government’s Essential Services Act
1941, and the Defence of India Rules (Rule 81-A, introduced in 1942, and Rule 56-A,
introduced in 1943). Each of these sets of provisions laid down severe restrictions
against strikes, and other forms of industrial action.
● To greater or lesser extent, the Trade Disputes Act 1929, its successor the Industrial
Disputes Act 1947, and earlier provisions such as the Bombay Act of 1934, were
essentially designed to enable government agencies to investigate industrial
disputes over relevant terms and conditions of employment, and to settle them in
appropriate cases.
● But generally the terms of this legislation were historically directed more towards
the control of labour than towards the settlement issue.
Lets Sum Up:
• Labour Control
1947, introducing the concept of “unfair labour practice” into national labour law.
Act. for eg.: The refusal by an employer to bargain collectively in good faith with the
● Owing to “New Industrial Policy,” the Indian government was committed to reducing the
number of industry sectors under the monopoly or control of the state, abolishing the
need for government approval for new investment in specific sectors of the economy,
and generally winding back the public sector. Unprofitable state industries were to be
wound back or closed down, and a more flexible system for the licensing of new businesses
introduced.
● A shift to a less regulated labour market, particularly in relation to the tight controls
exercised (at least in the organized sector) over dismissals and redundancies and the use of
contract labour, was inevitably part of this policy.
● Labour Reforms also remained untouched during the economic reforms carried out in
1991.
● The Second National Commission of Labour had submitted its report in 2002
which said that there was multiplicity of Labour Laws in India and therefore,
recommended that at the Central level multiple Labour Laws should be codified in
4 or 5 Labour Codes
● Many provisions of Labour Laws trace their origin to the time of the British Raj.
However, with changing times, many of them either became ineffective or did not have
any contemporary relevance. Rather than protecting the interests of workers, these
provisions became difficulties for them.
● The Central Government has taken historical step of codifying 29 laws into 4 Codes, so
that workers can get security along with respect, health and other welfare measures
with ease
● The New codes are:
● Earlier, the working class was entangled in web of multiple labour legislations.
● The Central Government has taken a revolutionary step in the right direction