For a full discussion of this distinction see K. G. J. C. Knowles; Strikes: A Study in Industrial Conflict, Philosophical Library, New York, 1952, pp. 212-239.
2.
A.E.C. Hare; Industrial Relations in New Zealand, Whitcombe and Tombs , Wellington, and J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., 1946, p. 49.
3.
For example the strike of the Mount Isa metal miners in 1964-65, though far from typical of Australian strike experience, does afford a good illustration of the complex nature of the issues involved in a particular strike. See E. I. Sykes, in The Journal of Industrial Relations, volume 7, No. 3, November, 1965, pp. 265-280, for an excellent account of this dispute.
4.
Ian Turner, Industrial Labour and Politics, A.N.U., 1965, Chapter 6.
5.
See D.W. Oxnam, "The Incidence of Strikes in Australia" in Readings in Australian Industrial Relations, edited by J. E. Isaac and W. G. Ford, Sun Publications, Sydney, 1966.
6.
D.W. Oxnam: "Strikes in Australia" in The Economic Record, Vol. 29, No. 56, May, 1953, pp. 77-81, and "The Incidence of Strikes in Australia," op. cit., and also R.G.S. Rutherford , "The Duration of Domestic Disputes in New South Wales 1951-56: A Preliminary Investigation" in The Journal of Industrial Relations, Vol. 3, No. 2, October, 1961, pp. 105-116.
7.
D.W. Oxnam: "The Incidence of Strikes in Australia," op. cit.
8.
Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority, Annual Report, 1964, p. 84.
9.
The Joint Coal Board was established under the Commonwealth Coal Industry Act 1946 and The New South Wales Coal Industry Act 1946. Provision for such joint federal-state legislation is contained in Section 51, clause XXXVII of the Australian Constitution. The Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority was established under the Stevedoring Industry Act of 1956 by virtue of powers relating to trade and commerce with other countries, and among the states which are contained in Section 51, clause 1 of the Australian Constitution.