Gray, Lois S.2020-11-172020-11-171984-01-01214941https://hdl.handle.net/1813/75169[Excerpt] Union-management cooperation is not a passing fad. It is not a new, or even a recent, development on the American labor relations scene. Nonetheless, interest in this subject has been growing. It is the purpose of this article, first, to clarify the meaning of union-management cooperation, indicating what it is and what it is not; second, to describe its history in the United States, going back to World War I; third, to explain the forces, both past and present, that have led to the development of union-management cooperation; fourth, to describe the various mechanisms employed to achieve this cooperation, including the levels of involvement and their scope; fifth, to set forth the necessary and sufficient conditions for successful union-management cooperation: and, finally, to discuss its future.en-USRequired Publisher Statement: Copyright by Labor Studies Journal. Published version posted with special permission of the copyright holder.ILRCornell Universityunion-managementcooperationUnited StateshistoryemploylaborconditionUnion-Management Cooperation: A Passing Fad or Permanent Change?article