Stephen F. Befort is the Gray, Plant, Mooty, Mooty, and Bennett Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School. He is the author of Employment Law and Practice, Second Edition (2003). John W. Budd is the Industrial Relations Land Grant Chair at the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management. He is the author of the award-winning Labor Relations: Striking a Balance (2006).
"Invisible Hands, Invisible Objectives demonstrates well the need to embrace explicit objectives and models of the employment relationship to understand, analyze, study, and reform workplace law and public policy. It also clearly shows what can be gained from such an approach. The book is aimed at a wide audience and is highly readable but at the same time fulfills the prerequisites of an academic textbook. It could be used for university courses at undergraduate and postgraduate levels as well as in labor education in the United States and abroad . . . This text will be an excellent resource for teaching comparative industrial relations for advanced law students, as the underlying theoretical concept is very appealing and easily applicable for comparative purposes."—Martin E. Riask, Labor Studies Journal "The book is a model of interdisciplinary scholarship, seamlessly blending the disciplines of law, economics, and public policy, along with a sprinkling of international human rights and comparative law, to focus on the 'big picture' of labor and employment law in the United States . . . Invisible Hands, Invisible Objectives creates and applies a framework to make discourse about the future of American employment policy more intelligent, more comprehensive, more honest, and more constructive."—Laura J. Cooper, Chronicle "Professors Befort and Budd offer specific policy recommendation that would balance workplace law and public policy's three objectives—efficiency, equity, and voice. Even if the reader does not finally agree with the book's recommendations for reform, he or she will no doubt find use in the author's clear and open discussion of what is often left unsaid about the goals and models of workplace law."—Harvard Law Review "Written for policymakers and scholars, this volume shows how the current global financial crisis affects free market ideologies, and how employment relationships in the United Sates need to be reworked in terms of regulations and economic efficiency."—Book News "Invisible Hands, Invisible Objectives offers a values-driven analysis of workplace law and policy and a timely blueprint for reform. Budd and Befort's conceptual framework will be an important tool for scholars and students seeking to make sense of the existing crazy-quilt patchwork of work law, and for policymakers committed to a regulatory ideal of 'employment with a human face.'"—Marion G. Crain, Washington University School of Law "A book like this is especially needed today, given the expanding divide between the top ten percent of earners and the lower ninety percent. With the decline of private sector labor organizations, American workers have been left with no real voice and no individual bargaining power. Our health care coverage and pension programs are in dire shape, and the authors make proposals to deal with such critical issues. Sooner or later, American workers are going to realize how poorly they are being treated, and a book like this will be needed to help leaders think about what should be done."—Charles Carver, George Washington University and author of Can Unions Survive? "Invisible Hands adds to the discussion of public policy toward employment by providing a superior unified framework for thinking about the employment relationship in the United States. The authors' approach will be very persuasive to practitioners and scholars alike and will alter the discussion of employment issues."—Dale Belman, Michigan State University