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The Labor Law Group 

 

Mural 

The Labor Law Group had its origins in a compelling call for the development of better books and materials for the instruction of law students on labor law by Professor Willard Wirtz at the 1946 meeting of the Association of American Law Schools.  In response to Wirtz’s address, approximately forty labor law professors and practitioners met in Ann Arbor in 1947 to discuss the problem and begin work on a book. With the publication of their first book in 1953 these same academics and practitioners formed the Labor Law Group as a non-profit trust dedicated to the development of materials for the preparation of law students for the practice of labor and employment law.  The “Group process” for developing books consists of: Group meetings among members and practitioners to plan and assign projects, the writing and editing of the project by the assigned members, editing of the project by the Group’s Executive Committee, and publication of the project with all royalties returned to the Group to fund future meetings and projects.  The Group currently has two major projects in production and six books published with Thomson/West and Foundation Press.

 
 
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