TY - CHAP AB - The primary objective of this paper is to understand the extent to which Australian industrial relations academics took up the different heuristic frameworks from USA and U.K. from the 1960s to the 1980s. A second objective is to begin to understand why, and in what ways ideas are transmitted in academic disciplines drawing on a “market model” for ideas. It is shown that in the years between 1960s and 1980s a modified U.S. (Dunlopian) model of interpreting industrial relations became more influential in Australia than that of U.K. scholarship, as exemplified by the British Oxford School. In part this reflects the breadth, flexibility and absence of an overt normative tenor in Dunlop’s model which thus offered lower transaction costs for scholars in an emergent discipline seeking recognition and approval from academia, practitioners and policy-makers. Despite frequent and wide-ranging criticism of Dunlop’s model, it proved a far more enduring transfer to Australian academic industrial relations than the British model, albeit in a distorted form. The market model for the diffusion of ideas illuminates the ways in which a variety of local contextual factors influenced the choices taken by Australian industrial relations academics. VL - 13 SN - 978-1-84950-305-1, 978-0-76231-152-1/0742-6186 DO - 10.1016/S0742-6186(04)13008-4 UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/S0742-6186(04)13008-4 AU - Kelly Diana PY - 2004 Y1 - 2004/01/01 TI - THE TRANSFER OF IDEAS IN INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS: DUNLOP AND OXFORD IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF AUSTRALIAN INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS THOUGHT, 1960–1985 T2 - Advances in Industrial & Labor Relations T3 - Advances in Industrial & Labor Relations PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 245 EP - 273 Y2 - 2024/04/23 ER -