Voice and Involvement at Work: Experience with Non-Union RepresentationPaul J. Gollan, Bruce E. Kaufman, Daphne Taras, Adrian Wilkinson In the last decade, nonunion employee representation (NER) has become a much discussed topic in the fields of human resource management, employment relations, and employment/labor law. This book examines the purpose, structure, and performance of various types of employee representation bodies created by companies in non-union settings to promote collective forums for voice and involvement at the workplace. This unique volume presents the first longitudinal evidence on the performance, success, and failure of NER plans over an extended time period. Consisting of twelve detailed, in-depth case studies of actual NER plans in operation across four countries, this volume provides unparalleled evidence on such matters as: the motives behind the initial establishment of NER, different organizational forms of NER in industry, key success and failure factors over the long-term, pro and con evaluations for employers and employees, and more. Voice and Involvement at Work captures an unequalled international and comparative perspective through a wide cross-section of different NER forms. |
From inside the book
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... Intersection FedEx Venn Diagram NER and ADR Examples and Intersection, Collective Bargaining and Independent Contracting 5 202 202 204 277 310 346 357 This page intentionally left blank 1 Voice and Involvement at List of Figures.
These countries exhibit interesting variations in legal regimes, union density, collective bargaining arrangements, company HRM practices, and individualist/neoliberal versus collectivist/social democratic cultural-political ...
At the high end are voice forms where the three dimensions collectively create the largest organizational impact. An example is Indirect, Contested, and Influence, such as a strong trade union that uses collective bargaining and strikes ...
As indicated earlier, sometimes organizations have both union and non-union voice forms (e.g., collective bargaining over wages and hours, joint employee–management consultation over process improvement), and this combination we treat ...
... option (No Voice in the diagram) and the collective bargaining option on the other end through independent labour unions—with the possibility of a complementary role between unions and NER at the far end of the voice continuum.
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Contents
1 | |
PART I Australia | 43 |
PART II Britain | 125 |
PART III Canada | 195 |
PART IV United States | 293 |
Contributors | 395 |
Index | 397 |
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Voice and Involvement at Work: Experience with Non-union Representation Paul Gollan No preview available - 2015 |