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Human resource management strategies for small territories : an alternative proposition

TLDR
The authors argue that small territories have, often blindly, accepted an industrial relations (IR) framework that is much more at home in the formalistic, mass production and mass employment based, manufacturing economies of the industrialised world.
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This article is published in International Journal of Educational Development.The article was published on 2001-05-01 and is currently open access. It has received 15 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Human resource management & Industrial relations.

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Citations
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Globalisation and Comparative Education: A Caribbean perspective

TL;DR: The phenomenon of globalisation argues for a broader view of the world than was hitherto necessary; one that takes into account the diversity of the human experience and consequently requires a deeper understanding of the particularities of each of the constituencies that make up that experience as discussed by the authors.
Journal Article

A Broader Definition of Fragility: The Communities and Schools of Brazil's "Favelas".

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors made connections between the literature on favelas, fragility and small states, particularly with regard to the fragile state of educational institutions in favela.
Journal ArticleDOI

Higher Education in Small Territories: Political Transition and Development in Macau

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the shape and scale of higher education in Macau, an autonomous Special Administrative Region within China, and with features comparable to those of small sovereign states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Higher Education in Small Territories: Political Transition and Development in Macau.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on Macau, which is an autonomous Special Administrative Region within China, and which has features comparable to those of small sovereign states and show ways in which small size has shaped higher education in the territory.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

All Quiet on the Workplace Front? A Critique of Recent Trends in British Industrial Sociology

Paul M. Thompson, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1995 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the Foucauldian perspective is used to identify the growing influence of Foucaultian perspectives in industrial sociology and develop a critique of the way in which such theory and research overstates the extent and effectiveness of new management practices, while marginalising the potential for resistance.
Book

Changing industrial relations in Europe

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the state of the art in industrial relations towards European industrial relations, focusing on the following issues: 1. Great Britain: From Partial Collectivism to Neo-liberalism to Where?: Paul Edwards (University of Warwick), Mark Hall (Universite de Paris-Nanterre), Richard Hyman (University of Warwick, Paul Marginson (Univerity of Leeds), Keith Sisson (Uni Leeds), Jeremy Waddington (U Warwick), and David Winchester (UCL). 2. Ireland: Corporation Rev
Journal ArticleDOI

Human Resource Management: An Agenda for the 1990's

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the origins of human resource management, provide an explication and critique of it as a conceptual model, and outline the perspective which characterizes their own research programme at Warwick University, and identify a range of themes and issues which the study of HRM ought to address.
Book

Reassessing Human Resource Management

TL;DR: A map, model or theory? Human Resource Management, Competition and Strategy - Richard Whipp Some Productive Tensions Human Resource Maximization - Rick Delbridge and Peter Turnbull The Management of Labour under Just-in-Time Manufacturing Systems PART TWO: DIMENSIONS of HRM Organization Culture and Human Resource management - Emmanuel Ogbonna Dilemmas and Contradictions Empowerment or Emasculation? Shop Floor Surveillance in a Total Quality Organization - Graham Sewell and Barry Wilkinson HRM and the Limits of Flexibility - Paul Blyton and Jonathan Morris Dec
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Frequently Asked Questions (10)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Human resource management strategies for small territories: an alternative proposition" ?

This paper tackles the issue of educational development from a somewhat different, and still under-explored, perspective: that of human resource management ( HRM ). This paper argues that small territories have, often blindly, accepted an ‘ industrial relations ’ ( IR ) framework that is much more at home in the formalistic, mass production and mass employment based, manufacturing economies of the industrialised world. The paper identifies aspects of current industrial relations as well as educational practice that could be addressed in order to better tap the benefits of this different understanding of human resourcefulness. 

Individual discretion and competence can and should continue to be encouraged; but schools continue to emphasise individually based forms of assignment and assessment; while students fresh out of (especially post-secondary) school have been criticised by bosses and managers for demonstrating poor leadership, co-operative and followership skills. 

a more inclusivist and less academically driven curriculum helps to shift the educational system away from an elitist path for a minority who would tend to be lost to the system anyway though a brain or skill drain; as well as dampen a discrimination in favour of white-collar, non-technical employment. 

The pressure is now on for ‘employee affairs’ to graduate from a marginal department maintaining sickness, seniority, leave and disciplinary records to become strategically integrated with the overall business objectives of a firm (Robbins, 1983; Amaya, 1990). 

Information about their families, friends, favourite haunts, political beliefs would be available in such territories because of a much lower threshold of privacy. 

But it is the area of educational planning and management in small states that is probably the most developed and best sustained of all these research fields. 

The second approach is to discard the given theory and construct a new one inductively, based on one’s own experiences, including street wisdom. 

As noted by Connell (1988, p. 5):Social ties in island micro-states are so powerful and pervasive that anonymity, impersonal role relationships and informality are difficult to maintain. 

In spite of the ‘privatisation’ of development, political and administrative structures continue to carry a major responsibility in maximising the competitiveness of their economies generally and of individual firms particularly. 

With increasing smallness of plant and of labour force, it is also likely that the more prevalent form of labour relations is skewed towards a unitarism where the owner–manager exercises undisputed control.