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Readership: Academics, researchers, and scholars of Industrial Relations, Human Resource Management, and Management Studies; HRM consultants and practitioners.
Employee participation encompasses the range of mechanisms used to involve the workforce in decisions at all levels of the organization - whether direct or indirect - conducted with employees or through their representatives. In its various guises, the topic of employee participation has been a recurring theme in industrial relations and human resource management. One of the problems in trying to develop any analysis of participation is that there is potentially limited overlap between these different disciplinary traditions, and scholars from diverse traditions may know relatively little of the research that has been done elsewhere. Accordingly in this book, a number of the more significant disciplinary areas are analysed in greater depth in order to ensure that readers gain a better appreciation of what participation means from these quite different contextual perspectives. Not only is there a range of different traditions contributing to the research and literature on the subject, there is also an extremely diverse sets of practices that congregate under the banner of participation. The handbook discusses various arguments and schools of thought about employee participation, analyzes the range of forms that participation can take in practice, and examines the way in which it meets objectives that are set for it, either by employers, trade unions, individual workers, or, indeed, the state. In doing so, the Handbook brings together leading scholars from around the world who present and discuss fundamental theories and approaches to participation in organization as well as their connection to broader political forces. These selections address the changing contexts of employee participation, different cultural/ institutional models, old/'new' economy models, shifting social and political patterns, and the correspondence between industrial and political democracy and participation.
As a rich contemporary and relevant overview of the nature, importance and benefits of participation this book will be hard to beat.
Auteur
Adrian Wilkinson is Professor of Employment Relations and Director of the Centre for Work, Organisation, and Wellbeing at Griffith University. He has written extensively on many aspects of Human Resource Management and Industrial Relations. He has written eight books, one hundred articles in refereed journals, as well as numerous book chapters and other papers. He is a Fellow and Accredited Examiner of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development in the UK and a Fellow of the Australian Human Resource Institute. He is on the editorial board of several refereed journals and is also Chief Editor for the International Journal of Management Reviews and an Associate Editor for Human Resource Management Journal. Paul J. Gollan is currently an Associate Professor, Department of Business, Faculty of Business and Economics, Macquarie University. He is also Associate Fellow in the Employment Relations and Organisational Behaviour Group in the Department of Management and Research Associate at the London School of Economics. He is also a Fellow of the Labour-Management Studies Foundation at Macquarie University and Adjunct Professor at the Macquarie Graduate School of Management (MGSM). He is a co-editor of the Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations. Paul has authored, co-authored, and co-edited a number of books in the fields of human resources and industrial relations including Models of Eemployee Participation in a Changing Global Environment: Diversity and Interaction (2001) and Employee Representation in Non-Union Firms (2007). Mick Marchington has been Professor of Human Resource Management at what is now Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, since 1995, having joined the University in the late 1980s. He has published widely on HRM, including about twenty books and monographs and nearly 150 book chapters and papers in refereed journals. He is also Editor of the Human Resource Management Journal, one of the leading journals in the area, and he has been joint chair of the HRM Study Group of the International Industrial Relations Association since 2003. He is a Chartered Companion of the CIPD, the highest grade of membership available. David Lewin is the Neil H. Jacoby Professor of Management, Human Resources, and Organizational Behavior at the UCLA Anderson School of Management. He also serves as Faculty Director of the UCLA Anderson School's Advanced Program in Human Resource Management, Young Presidents Organization (YPO) Management Seminar, and Strategic Leadership Institute (SLI). He is the author of many published works on such topics as human resource strategy, human resource management practices and business performance, workplace and organizational dispute resolution, and compensation and reward systems, including executive compensation and public sector pay practices. These include Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations (Vol. 16, 2009) and Contemporary Issues in Employment Relations (2006).
Texte du rabat
Employee participation encompasses the range of mechanisms (unions, councils, high-performance teams, etc.) used to involve the workforce in decisions at all levels of the organization. This Handbook looks at the different arguments and schools of thought, with the aim of problematizing them, not just in terms of implementation but also principles.
Contenu
Section I: Introduction
1: Adrian Wilkinson, Paul J. Gollan, Mick Marchington, and David Lewin: The History of Employee Participation and Recent Developments
Section II: Perspectives
2: Peter Boxall and John Purcell: A Human Resource Management perspective on Employee Participation
3: Peter Ackers: An Industrial Relations Perspective on Employee Participation
4: Glenn Patmore: A Legal Perspective on Employee Participation
5: Miguel Martinez Lucio: Labour Process and Marxist Perspectives on Employee Participation
6: David Marsden and Almudena Canibano: An Economic Perspective on Employee Participation
Section III: Forms of Participation in Practice
7: Adrian Wilkinson and Tony Dundon: Direct Participation
8: Richard Block and Peter Berg: Collective Bargaining as a Form of Employee Participation: Observations on the United States and Europe
9: Paul J. Gollan: Employer Strategies Towards Non-Union Collective Voice
10: Ray Markey, Greg Patmore, and Nikki Balnave: Worker Directors and Work Ownership/Co-operatives
11: Bruce Kaufman and Daphne Taras: Employee Participation Through Non-Union Forms of Employee Representation
12: Rebecca Gumbrell-McCormick and Richard Hyman: Works Councils: The European Model of Industrial Democracy?
13: Eric Kaarsemaker, Andrew Pendleton, and Erik Poutsma: Employee Share Ownership
14: Ian Kessler: Financial Participation
Sectino IV: Processes and Outcomes
15: Gregor Gall: Labour Union Responses to Participation in Employing Organisations
16: Alex Bryson, Rafael Gomez, and Paul Willman: Voice in the Wilderness: The Shift from Union to Non-Union Voice
17: Stephen Wood: High Involvement Management and Performance
18: David Lewin: Employee Voice and Mutual Gains
Section V: Policy and Comparative Issues
19: Mick Marchington and Andrew Timming: Paricipation Across Organizational Boundaries
20: John Budd and Stefan Zagelmeyer: Public Policy and Employee Participation
21: Howard Gospel and Andrew Pendleton: Corporate Governance and Employee Participation
22: Carola Frege and John Godard: Cross-National Variation in Representation Rights and Governance at Work
23: Ge…