1 / 32

CHAPTER TWO THE STUDY OF EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS

CHAPTER TWO THE STUDY OF EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS. Overview. ER is highly practical and compelling in study and practice General definition – systematic theoretical concepts Descriptive analysis Taxonomies as descriptive devices Rules Patterns of employment relations

adeola
Download Presentation

CHAPTER TWO THE STUDY OF EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER TWO THE STUDY OF EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS

  2. Overview ER is highly practical and compelling in study and practice General definition – systematic theoretical concepts Descriptive analysis Taxonomies as descriptive devices Rules Patterns of employment relations Models in employment relations Beyond Dunlop

  3. Introduction Highly practical: ‘Everyone who derives an income through work or who becomes involved in the organisation and management of employees at work is immersed in the practice of employment relations’ Employment relations = organisational performance and employee well-being How should ER be managed on the macro- and micro-levels? ER is all about compromise between competing ideas Compelling as a field of academic study and has practical applications

  4. Patterns of employment relations We need to systematically analyse employment relations First we have to examine the term descriptive analysis ‘To describe’ is to ‘give an account of’ or ‘state the characteristics of’ a specific event or instance – but we’re all different It’s all about what facts we accept, and therefore interpret Description can be very subjective

  5. ‘Descriptive’ analysis While description can be regarded as the first step towards explanation, it must be accompanied by theory Description does not lead to explanation Theory = a set of assumptions that can be tested Describing patterns of employment relations leads to an ability to generalise – to understand other events

  6. Lewins’ five levels of explanation Description – An account of an event or phenomenon from a particular standpoint, whether it is adopted consciously or unconsciously Taxonomy – A classification scheme designed for a particular purpose that groups together events or phenomena on the basis of similar characteristics Model – A simplification or representation of relationships between events or phenomena that is designed to provide a clearer picture of the world

  7. Lewins’ five levels of explanation (cont.) Law – A statement of a relationship between two or more variables that inevitably produces the same outcome, in terms of events or phenomena Causal theory – A complete answer to the ‘why’ question, which not only identifies the inevitable relationships between variables but also provides an account of the process by which one determines the other (Lewins 1992, pp.19–27)

  8. Taxonomies are classification systems designed to identify similar properties or characteristics in diverse events, situations or objects, e.g. clothes: ‘whites’ and ‘coloured’ cancer: ‘malignant’ and ‘benign’ rules: ‘formal’ and ‘informal’, ‘substantive’ and ‘procedural’ Taxonomies attempt to move analysis from the specific to the general They also attempt to identify commonalities Taxonomies as descriptive devices

  9. Taxonomies – creating order from chaos While taxonomies help bring order from chaos, they are still largely descriptive – they do not explain much about why events or situations occur

  10. The parties to employment relations • We need to identify and describe the parties involved in ER • Individuals • Unions • Employers • Employer associations • Government • The Commission • Describing the many features of these organisations (membership, internal governance and structures, goals and philosophies) is essential to gaining an understanding of ER

  11. Rules • Who makes the rules? • All of the parties can do so, either individually or in combination

  12. Rules (cont.) • There are three main ways that rules may be made (Flanders 1970): • Unilateral rule making creation and enforcement of rules by one, single, party (e.g. managerial prerogative) • Bilateral rule-making joint creation and enforcement of rules by two parties (e.g. collective bargaining) • Multilateral rule-making when three or more parties jointly make and enforce rules (e.g. the Commission with employers and unions)

  13. Rules (cont.) • Authorship of rule-making is vital • indicates where relative power lies in the employment relationship (e.g. high employer power = low employee power) • can have important consequences for the effectiveness of rules in influencing the behaviour of the parties to the employment relationship (e.g. more input = greater chance of acceptance)

  14. Explaining patterns of employment relations • Why do patterns of employment relations vary in different empirical situations? • such as across countries, industries, enterprises • And why do they change over time?

  15. Description and explanation Explain = ‘make clear’ ER accused of being ‘excessively descriptive’ and ‘atheoretical’ The study of ER is said to fail to ‘make clear the cause or reason for’ observed phenomena or, where explanation occurs, it remains at the level of the specific phenomenon rather than being generalised in order to advance theory Taxonomies identify commonalities across different situations or events, helping provide an explanation as to their causes and consequences

  16. Beyond description: explanatory factors and models • Description leads to taxonomies • This in turn leads to the development of • models • laws • causal explanations

  17. Development of explanatory models The first step: • Identify the reasons why events occur or the factors that are thought to explain particular empirical situations • This produces a long list of potential factors, none of which are specific • To move beyond this, link potential factors to form a model. Models are: ‘representations of something that exists in the world. They do not exist by themselves but, by their simplified nature, provide a clear picture of the world’ (Lewins 1992, p. 21)

  18. Models and taxonomies Models go beyond taxonomies because they attempt to link social phenomena together, thereby indicating relationships and potential lines of causality Models attempt to show, at a highly simplified level, how various factors affect each other

  19. Models in employment relations Dunlop (1958) • All ‘industrial relations systems’ are comprised of three main ‘actors’ who interact with each other and produce rules to regulate behaviour: • The State • Employees • Employers • Dunlop suggested that industrial relations systems operate within a larger ‘environment’ or ‘context’, which influences the rule-making behaviour of the actors • His work is regarded as being only a model

  20. Context and agency • Context • ‘the surroundings associated with phenomena which help to illuminate those phenomena’(Cappelli and Shearer, cited in Johns 2006, p. 386) or • ‘stimuli and phenomena that surround and thus exist in the environment external to the individual’ (Mowbray, cited in Johns 2006, p. 386)

  21. Context and agency (cont.) • Agency: • The capacity of social actors (like individuals and organisations) to take action as a result of the choices they make • Just ‘being’does not denote acting • Effective causal explanation can only come about through a combination of ‘context’ and ‘agency’

  22. Context and agency cont Kochan et al (1986, pp. 13-14): ‘A key premise of our framework is that choice and discretion of the part of labour, management and government affect the course and structure of industrial relations systems … Although environmental pressures are important and serve as a starting point for discussion of the determinants of an industrial relations system. These pressures do not strictly determine industrial relations outcomes. Thus an understanding of the choices the parties make in any given period much be informed by an analysis of the structures and history that constrain those choices’

  23. More on agency • We must pay attention to the parties in rule-making in employment relations • People • All have different values, motives and past experiences • Because they are all different, would probably make different choices in the same situation • Organisations • Are also all different from each other • Different purpose, history, governance, goals • All these factors impact on what response to a given situation will be chosen • To explain patterns of employment relations, we must therefore understand people and their organisations

  24. More on context The most enduring account of the contexts that influence employment relations was written by Dunlop (1958, p. 9): ‘The actors in an industrial relations system interact in a setting that includes three sets of givens. These features of the environment of an industrial relations system are determined by the larger society and its other sub-systems and are not explained within the industrial relations system. These contexts, however, are decisive in shaping the rules established by the actors in an industrial relations system’

  25. Dunlop’s ‘interrelated contexts’ • Dunlop identified three ‘interrelated contexts: • Technology • Market or budgetary constraints • Power relations and statutes of the actors • While widely criticised, these three ‘contexts’ have emerged and re-emerged many times as being important explanatory factors in the quest to understand patterns of employment relations in different nations, industries and enterprises

  26. Technology, markets and power • The nature of the technology and the production process more generally impacts on employment relations, e.g. • fixed or variable workplace • relation of workplace to residence • stability of workforce and operations • size of workgroup • job content • relation of machines to customers • schedules and shifts of the workplace

  27. Technology, markets and power (cont.) • The nature and dynamics of product markets help to explain the prevailing pattern of employment relations, e.g. • number of competitors • freedom of entry • standardisation of product • availability of substitute products • sources of supply • consumer demand • The nature and distribution of power,e.g. role of the State determines the relative power and status of the actors

  28. Beyond Dunlop • Dunlop added a lot – but his work has flaws: • The number of contexts: Only three? There are many others • Neglect of values and culture • The link between external contexts and the internal operation of industrial relations systems • The arbitrary separation between the industrial relations system and other societal ‘sub-systems’ • Levels of analysis • The definition and impact of ‘context’ implies factors which are beyond the control of the actors in employment relations

  29. Beyond Dunlop (cont.) Explanations of employment relations must acknowledge that the parties to employment relations can have the capacity to influence, as well as be influenced by, the contexts in which they operate History is a vital context

  30. An explanatory model of employment relations Bringing it all together • The neo-institutionalist explanations of employment relations rest on a pluralist analysis of the employment relationship • Employment relations operate at various levels • individual employee • work group • enterprise • industry • national • international • Within each level there are a number of parties who interact and compete

  31. An explanatory model of employment relations (cont.) Any explanation of the resultant rules must take into account the ‘agency’ of the concerned parties The explanation must also take into account the ‘context’ in order to achieve a true and reflective answer Each level of ER operates within a number of ‘contexts’ There is a hierarchy in levels of analysis The ‘same-level’ contexts include other factors ‘external’ to employment relations, but at the same level of analysis History is vital

  32. Summary This chapter has been all about theory Presented ideas and concepts used in the study of ER Marked difference between ‘description’ and ‘explanation’ Description is important but must be informed by theory Explanation is a complex exercise and mostly comes in the form of ‘models’; must combine ‘agency’ and ‘context’ The study of ER is cross-disciplinary

More Related