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The Oxford Handbook of Human Resource Management
Edited by Peter Boxall, John Purcell, and Patrick Wright
680 pages
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246x171mm
978-0-19-954702-9
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Paperback
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05 June 2008
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- A comprehensive survey of the state of the discipline
- Each chapter summarises findings in particular areas of HRM, and summarises the latest research
- Contributions are written by leading international HRM academics and researchers
HRM is central to management teaching and research, and has emerged in the last decade as a significant field from its earlier roots in Personnel Management, Industrial Relations, and Industrial Psychology. People Management and High Performance teams have become key functions and goals for manager at all levels in organizations.
The Oxford Handbook brings together leading scholars from around the world - and from a range of disciplines - to provide an authoritative account of current trends and developments. The Handbook is divided into four parts:
* Foundations and Frameworks,
* Core Processes and Functions,
* Patterns and Dynamics,
*
Measurement and Outcomes.
Overall it will provide an essential resource for anybody who wants to get to grips with current thinking, research, and development on HRM.Readership: Academics, reserachers, and graduate students of HRM, Industrial Relations, and the Sociology of Work and Employment; HRM and Personnel professionals and those studying for professional HRM qualifications (e.g. CIPD).
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Edited by Peter Boxall, Professor of Human Resource Management, the University of Auckland, John Purcell, Research Professor, Industrial Relations Research Unit, Warwick Business School, and Patrick Wright, Professor of Strategic Human Resource Management, Cornell University Contributors: Matthew Allen, Cornell University Stephen Bach, King's College London Rosemary Batt, Cornell University Paul Boselie, Tilburg University Peter Boxall, University of Auckland Helen De Cieri, Monash University Bill Cooke, Wayne State
John Cordery, University of Western Australia Rick Delbridge, Cardiff Business School John Delery, University of Arkansas Barry Gerhart, University of Wisconsin-Madison Damian Grimshaw, Manchester Business School James Guthrie, University of Kansas Bill Harley, University of Melbourne David Guest, King's College London Bruce Kaufman, Georgia State University Sven Kepes, University of Arkansas Ian Kessler, Saïd Business School, University of Oxford Brian Kim, Michigan State University Nicolas Kinnie, School of Management, University of Bath Thomas Kochan, MIT Ellen Ernst Kossek, Michigan State University Gary Latham, University of Toronto David Lepak, Rutgers Heather MacDonald, University of Waterloo Mick Marchington, Manchester Business School Lilian de Menezes, Cass Business School Marc Orlitzky, University of Auckland Jaap Paauwe, Erasmus University Sharon Parker, Australian Graduate School of Management Shaun Pichler, Michigan State University John Purcell, School of Management, University of Bath Jill Rubery, Manchester Business School Neal Schmitt, Michigan State University Scott Snell, Cornell University Lorne Sulsky, Wilfred Laurier University Juani Swart, School of Management, University of Bath
Paul Thompson, Strathclyde Business School Tony Watson, Nottingham Business School Jonathan Winterton, ESC Toulouse Stephen Wood, University of Sheffield Patrick Wright, Cornell University
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"This excellent Handbook provides a valuable insight into the main issues that currently preoccupy the field of human resource management ... the book is remarkable. It contains many first-rate chapters written by leading authorities." - British Journal of Industrial Relations
"...a superb collection of up-to-date chapters on the evolving subject of HRM... it debates the ideas of HRM viewed through numerous academic disciplines... the chapters offer a comprehensive investigation of HRM and a much needed discussion of how it contributes to organisational performance." - Industrial Relations Journal
"Many contributors go beyond the usual remit of summarizing theory and research as it currently exists and contribute new theoretical insights and directions." - Relations Industrielles/Industrial Relations
"This is a sophisticated and scholarly volume. It provides an excellent overview of HRM for those seeking to learn more about the field and a valuable resource for those teaching or researching in the area." - Work and Occupations
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1: Peter Boxall, John Purcell, and Pat Wright: Human Resource Management: Scope, Analysis, and Significance
Part I: Foundations and Frameworks
2: Bruce Kaufman: The Development of Human Resource Management in Historical and International Perspective
3: Peter Boxall: The Goals of HRM
4: Damian Grimshaw and Jill Rubery: Economics and Human Resource Management
5: Matthew Allen and Pat Wright: Strategic Management and HRM
6: Tony Watson: Organizational Theory and HRM
7: David Guest: Human resource management and the worker: towards a new psychological contract?
8: Paul Thompson and Bill Harley: HRM and the Worker: Labour Process Perspectives
9: Jaap Paauwe and Paul Boselie: HRM and Societal Embeddedness
Part 2: Core Processes and Functions
10: Sharon Parker and John Cordery: Work Organization
11: David Lepak and Scott Snell: Employment sub-systems and the 'HR architecture'
12: Mick Marchington: Employee Voice Systems
13: Ellen Kossek and Shaun Pichler: EEO and the Management of Diversity
14: Marc Orlitzky: Recruitment Strategy
15: Neal Schmitt and Brian Kim: Selection Decision-Making
16: Jonathan Winterton: Training, Development and Competency
17: James Guthrie: Renumeration: Pay Effects at Work
18: Gary Latham, Lorne Sulsky, and Heather MacDonald: Performance Management
Part 3: Patterns and Dynamics
19: Sven Kepes and John Delery: HRM Systems and the Problem of Internal Fit
20: Rick Delbridge: HRM and Contemporary Manufacturing
21: Rosemary Batt: Service Strategies: Marketing, Operations, and Human Resource Practices
22: Juani Swart: HRM and Knowledge Workers
23: Stephen Bach and Ian Kessler: HRM and the New Public Management
24: Bill Cooke: Multinational Companies and Global HR Strategy
25: Helen De Cieri: Transnational Firms and Cultural Diversity
Part 4: Measurement and Outcomes
26: John Purcell and Nick Kinnie: HRM and Business Performance
27: Barry Gerhart: Modeling Human Resource Management and Performance Linkages
28: Stephen Wood and Lilian de Menezes: Family-friendly, Equal Opportunity and High-involvement Management in Britain
29: Tom Kochan: Social Legitimacy of the Human Resource Management Profession: A U.S. Perspective
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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