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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Thus, at the lefthand side of the continuum are individual, informal, and communication types of voice, while moving rightward on the continuum leads to voice forms with increasingly collective, formal, and power attributes.
In this survey, only a small minority (12 percent) of workplaces are reported as No Voice—meaning absence of at least one formal voice mechanism (informal voice may well still be present). Of the 88 percent that have a voice mechanism, ...
... the Standard Oil company and corporate spin-offs), introduced formal plans of employee representation (Kaufman 2000; Rees 2010). Evaluations of NER were guardedly positive, except among the trade unions, who hated them.
Starting from near zero in the early 1980s, forms of representative consultation and participation outside the formal structure of collective bargaining have significantly expanded, although they are still definitely a minority ...
In 2000, Lipset and Meltz reported that about one fifth of non-union employees have formal representation other than unions (p. 225). This estimate was confirmed by Campolieti, Gomez, and Gunderson (2013). They found that “Canada with ...
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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 |