GM-Toyota Joint Venture and Its Implications under the National Labor Relations Act, The
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Authors
Nelson, Richard F.
Issue Date
1984
Volume
17
Issue
Type
Journal Article
Language
Keywords
Alternative Title
Abstract
INTRODUCTION|In efforts to pump renewed vigor into a deflated industry, world automobile manufacturers have found one way to absorb the shock of recent travels over bumpy roads. In the past five years, auto manufacturers have begun more than thirty new joint projects to share technology, engineering and the costs of manufacturing new model cars. Now, two automobile manufacturers have decided to share more: an auto assembly plant.|On February 17, 1983, executives of General Motors Corporation (GM) and Japan's largest auto maker, Toyota, signed an agreement proposing a joint venture to manufacture a new model car at GM's now idle Fremont, California auto plant. The GM Toyota venture would be the first of what may prove to be numerous American-foreign auto manufacturing plants located in the United States...
Description
Citation
17 Creighton L. Rev. 821 (1983-1984)
Publisher
Creighton University School of Law
