Business Law Phoenix AZ

A business is a legal entity that must follow certain rules and regulations. Business law is geared specifically towards business interests around Phoenix. There are many circumstances where a business lawyer can help the business get off the ground including business bill of sale, incorporating, contracts, mergers and acquisitions, shareholders agreement, and more. Here you will get access to the best business lawyers in Phoenix, AZ listed below.

Robert R Berk
2901 N CENTRAL AVE STE 800
PHOENIX, AZ
Michael R Altaffer
3838 N CENTRAL AVE STE 1800
PHOENIX, AZ
David R Bosse
3101 N CENTRAL AVE STE 1500
PHOENIX, AZ
Kevin R Keating
3300 N CENTRAL AVE STE 1900
PHOENIX, AZ
Amy Melissa Horwitz
602-248-1000
3200 N Central Ave Ste 2000
Phoenix, AZ
C Megan Fischer
2901 N CENTRAL AVE STE 1600
PHOENIX, AZ
Bradley H Schleier
3101 N CENTRAL AVE STE 1090
PHOENIX, AZ
William D Holm
2901 N CENTRAL AVE STE 800
PHOENIX, AZ
Carol M Baron
3300 N CENTRAL AVE STE 1900
PHOENIX, AZ
Katherine A O'Connell
888-222-1328
3300 N Central Ave Ste 900
Phoenix, AZ
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Business Law

FROM: Congressional Digest, June-July 1993

Present Federal law regulating labor-management relations is largely a product of the New Deal era of the 1930s. While Congress has acted to raise the Federal minimum wage and has considered labor law reform affecting both private and public employees, no major new labor law shave been passed over the past several decades.

Early Labor Laws

The Clayton Act In response to pressure to clarify labor's position under antitrust laws, Congress, in 1914, enacted the Clayton Act, which included several major provisions protective of organized labor.

The Act stated that "the labor of a human being is not commodity or article of commerce," and provided further that nothing contained in the Federal antitrust laws:

shall be construed to forbid the existence and operation of labor... organizations... nor shall such organizations, or the members thereof, be held or construed to be illegal combinations or conspiracies in restraint of trade under the anti-trust laws.

Railway Labor Act In 1926, the Railway Labor Act (RLA) was passed, requiring employers to bargain collectively and prohibiting discrimination against unions. It applied originally to interstate railroads and their related undertakings. In 1936, it was amended to include airlines engaged in interstate commerce.

Davis-Bacon Act In 1931, Congress passed the Davis-Bacon Act, requiring that contracts for construction entered into by the Federal G...

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