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Interest-based Negotiations at Kaiser Permanente
Robert B. McKersie Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Sloan School of Management Susan C. Eaton Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Thomas A. Kochan Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Sloan School of Management April 2003 MIT Sloan Working Paper No. 4312-03; Institute for Work & Employment Research Paper No. 05-2003 Abstract: In 1997 Kaiser Permanente (KP) and a coalition of 26 local unions representing nearly 70,000 Kaiser employees created what is now the nation's largest and most ambitious labor-management partnership. In 2000, the parties faced the major challenge of negotiating their first labor agreement under the new Partnership. They designed and implemented what is also the largest and most complex interest-based negotiations (IBN) process carried out to date in the field of labor-management relations. We describe this case here, both to provide an historical account of the process and to explore the lessons that might be learned from how these parties addressed a series of generic challenges encountered when introducing IBN principles into collective bargaining.
Keywords: Labor-management Partnership, Interest-based Negotiations Process, Kaiser Permanente Working Paper SeriesDate posted: June 03, 2003 ; Last revised: January 07, 2006Suggested CitationContact Information
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