Front Matter
Title Page
Volume 16 (1990)
Note
Editor
Table of Contents
Volume 16 (1990)
Foreword
Introduction and History of the Canada-United States Law Institute
Sidney Picker Jr.
Conference Opening
Henry T. King Jr.
Speech
Human Resources: The Key to Canda-U.S. Competitiveness
Anthony P. Carnevale
Impact of U.S. Immigration Law Based upon International Business
Austin T. Fragomen
EC 1992: Human Resources in a Unified Market Implications for U.S.-Canada Competitivenss
Charles M. Ludolph
The Impact of the Free Trade Agreement on the Flow of Services between Canada and the United States
Colleen S. Morton
The Impact of the Free Trade Agreement on the Flow of Services and Temporary Business Travel across the Canada-U.S. Border
Meriel V.M. Bradford
Designing Retirement Programs
William Napoli Jr.
Developing Human Resources: Participative Management and Employee Involvement: Slogans and Reality
Ben Fischer
Representation of Employees and the Role of Unions in the United States and Canada: The Union Response to Change in a Competitive Context
Irving Bluestone
Competitiveness and the Trade Union Response: The Internal and External Labor Market Linkages
Peter Warrian
Legal Aspects of the Utilization of Human Resources in the Canada-U.S. Context: A Comparative Look at Hiring and Termination and Regulation of the Workplace
David J. Millstone
Comparative Competitive Aspects of Japanese Use of Human Resources vis-a-vis United States and Canda
Norihiro Takeuchi
The Comparative Impact of Direct Federal and State/Provincial Taxes on People Transfers in the Canada-U.S. Context: Tax Equalization
Robert D. Brown
Canada-U.S. Aspects of People as a Renewable Resource in the World Competitive Context: Public and Private Job Training and Retraining
T. Leslie Horswill
Through the Looking Glass: Reforming Education and Restructuring the Workplace to Improve Competitiveness
Peter Morici
Goal Setting Peoplewise for Canada-U.S. in the World Competitive Context: What Should Our Goals Be and How Do We Get There
Stephen L. Schlossberg
Closing Remarks and Discussion
Henry T. King Jr.