Igor Nossar
Queensland University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Igor Nossar.
Journal of Industrial Relations | 2015
Igor Nossar; Richard Johnstone; Anna Macklin; Michael Rawling
Supply chain outsourcing has posed problems for conventional labour regulation, which focuses on employers contracting directly with workers, particularly employees. These difficulties have been exacerbated by the traditional trifurcated approach to regulation of pay and conditions, work health and safety and workers’ compensation. This paper analyses the parallel interaction of two legal developments within the Australian textile, clothing and footwear industry. The first is mandatory contractual tracking mechanisms within state and federal labour laws and the second is the duties imposed by the harmonised Work Health and Safety Acts. Their combined effect has created an innovative, fully enforceable and integrated regulatory framework for the textile, clothing and footwear industry and, it is argued, other supply chains in different industry contexts. This paper highlights how regulatory solutions can address adverse issues for workers at the bottom of contractual networks, such as fissured workplaces and capital fragmentation, by enabling regulators to harness the commercial power of business controllers at the apex to ensure compliance throughout the entire chain.
Federal law review | 2015
Richard Johnstone; Igor Nossar; Michael Rawling
The Road Safety Remuneration Act 2012 (Cth) (the Act) explicitly enables the Road Safety Remuneration Tribunal to make orders that can impose binding requirements on all the participants in the road transport supply chain, including consignors and consignees at the apex of the chain, for the pay and safety of both employee and independent contractor drivers. The tribunal is also specifically empowered to make enforceable orders to reduce or remove remuneration related incentives and pressures that contribute to unsafe work practices in the road transport industry. Recently the tribunal handed down its first order. The article considers whether, and the degree to which, the tribunal has been willing to exercise its explicit power to impose enforceable obligations on consignors and consignees – such as large supermarket chains – at the apex of road transport supply chains. It examines the substance and extent of the obligations imposed by the tribunal, including whether the tribunal has exercised the full range of powers vested in it by the Act. We contend that the tribunals first order primarily imposes obligations on direct work providers and drivers without making large, powerful consignors and consignees substantively responsible for driver pay and safety. We argue that the tribunals first order could have more comprehensively fulfilled the objectives of the Act by more directly addressing the root causes of low pay and poor safety in the road transport industry.
Revista Brasileira de Saúde Ocupacional | 2007
Michael Quinlan; Richard Johnstone; Phillip James; Igor Nossar
The last two decades have witnessed a fragmentation of previously integrated systems of production and service delivery with the advent of boundary-less, networked and porous organisational forms. This trend has been associated with the growth of outsourcing and increased use of contingent workers. One consequence of these changes is the development of production/service delivery systems based on complex national and international networks of multi-tiered subcontracting increasingly labelled as supply chains. A growing body of research indicates that subcontracting and contingent work arrangements affect design and decision-making processes in ways that can seriously undermine occupational health and safety (OHS). Elaborate supply chains also present a regulatory challenge because legal responsibility for OHS is diffused amongst a wider array of parties, targeting key decision-makers is more difficult, and government agencies encounter greater logistical difficulties trying to safeguard contingent workers. In a number of industries these problems have prompted new forms of regulatory intervention, including mechanisms for sheeting legal responsibility to the top of supply chains, contractual tracking devices and increasing industry, union and community involvement in enforcement. After describing the problems just alluded to this paper examines recent efforts to regulate supply chains to safeguard OHS in the United Kingdom and Australia.
Faculty of Law; Australian Centre for Health Law Research; School of Law | 2003
Igor Nossar; Richard Johnstone; Michael Quinlan
Faculty of Law; School of Law | 2012
Richard Johnstone; Shae McCrystal; Igor Nossar; Michael Quinlan; Michael Rawling; Joellen Riley
Archive | 2017
Igor Nossar; R Tennent; Richard Johnstone; N Shepherd; Michael Rawling
Archive | 2017
Michael Rawling; N Shepherd; Richard Johnstone; Igor Nossar
Faculty of Law; School of Law | 2017
Michael Rawling; Richard Johnstone; Igor Nossar
Faculty of Law | 2015
Igor Nossar; Richard Johnstone; Anna Macklin; Michael Rawling
Faculty of Law | 2015
Richard Johnstone; Igor Nossar; Michael Rawling