List of figures; List of tables; List of abbreviations; List of contributors; Preface; 1. Researching the changing workplace William Brown and Paul Edwards; 2. Competition and the retreat from collective bargaining William Brown, Alex Bryson and John Forth; 3. Trade union decline and the economics of the workplace David G. Blanchflower and Alex Bryson; 4. Employee representation Andy Charlwood and John Forth; 5. Voice at the workplace: where do we find it, why is it there and where is it going? Paul Willman, Rafael Gomez and Alex Bryson; 6. From industrial relations to human resource management: the changing role of the personnel function David Guest and Alex Bryson; 7. High involvement management Stephen Wood and Alex Bryson; 8. Conflict at work: the changing pattern of disputes Gill Dix, Keith Sisson and John Forth; 9. Employees' experience of work Francis Green and Keith Whitfield; 10. Equality and diversity at work Andrew Pendleton, Keith Whitfield and Alex Bryson; 11. The changing use of contingent pay at the modern British workplace Shirley Dex and John Forth; 12. Foreign ownership and industrial relations Tony Edwards and Janet Walsh; 13. The public sector in transition Stephen Bach, Rebecca Kolins Givan and John Forth; 14. Legal regulation and the changing workplace Linda Dickens and Mark Hall; 15. Conclusion: the evolutionary process William Brown, Alex Bryson, John Forth and Keith Whitfield; Technical appendix John Forth and Alex Bryson; Bibliography; Index.
An authoritative account of how the workplace has changed, and why it has changed, for both workers and employers.
'At the 150th anniversary of the publication of The Origin of
Species, it is an opportune time to ask how and why, in coping with
the environmental changes of markets and legal constraints, British
employment relations as a species has been transformed in the past
quarter century. William Brown and his colleagues have provided a
globally relevant and truly insightful picture based on WIRS/WERS.'
Takeshi Inagami, University of Tokyo and the Japan Institute for
Labour Policy and Training (JILPT)
'A pioneering and unprecedented, empirically based and encompassing
work by leading scholars and well-known experts on basic changes at
the workplace and the fundamental shifts of employment relations in
Britain. An absolute must for everybody interested in understanding
the extraordinary transformation processes and their far-reaching
consequences over the quarter century spanning the
Thatcher/Major/Blair years.' Berndt Keller, University of
Konstanz
'The Evolution of the Modern Workplace makes excellent use of
Britain's workplace surveys to capture the profound changes that
have occurred in employment relations since the turbulent 1980s.
This will be the standard comparative reference for assessing
changes in employment relations yet to come. It is especially
timely and valuable, given the likely impacts the global financial
crisis will have on employment institutions and outcomes in the
years ahead.' Thomas A. Kochan, MIT Institute of Work and
Employment Research
'This book provides the most comprehensive analysis of the major
changes which have occurred in the British workplace over the past
twenty-five years and the implications for work and employment
relations in the future. It brings together renowned scholars who
have shaped the study of the British workplace and is required
reading for all who are interested in this important subject.'
Russell Lansbury, University of Sydney, and International
Industrial Relations Association
'Workplaces and work have both changed radically in the past three
decades. Professor Brown and his colleagues brilliantly chronicle
the alterations using successive Workplace Employment Relations
Surveys. These include the retreat from collective bargaining,
voice, high involvement HRM, contingent pay, upheaval in the public
sector and legal regulation. This is the definitive work on the
twenty-first-century workplace.' David Metcalf, London School of
Economics
'This book sets the international benchmark for studies of the
changing workplace. Drawing on a unique data set spanning three
decades of workplace surveys, an elite research team interrogates
the sources of continuity and change in the study of work and
employment in the United Kingdom. This masterful blend of
longitudinal data analysis, accessible prose and deep understanding
of key human resources, employment law and industrial relations
issues generates critical policy and practitioner insights and sets
the research agenda for years to come.' Gregor Murray, University
of Montreal
'This is a compelling read. Anyone who works in the field of
employment relations, whether as an academic, HR specialist, trade
unionist or student will find it a marvellous reference source. It
is a comprehensive account of the changes that have coursed their
way through the workplace in the recent years and points to several
potential changes to come. The chapters bring to light the
importance of the Workplace Employment Relations Survey - no mean
feat! It's an excellent addition to the study of employment
relations.' Ed Sweeney, ACAS
'[The Evolution of the Modern Workplace] is full of original and
provocative insights: Brown, Bryson and Forth challenge arguments
about the impact of globalisation with the finding that it is the
intensity of product market competition, rather than its global or
international character, which accounts for the decline of
collective bargaining coverage in Britain … It covers a wide range
of topics, including employee representation, HRM, conflict,
equality and diversity, and pay, to name just a few. There is an
abundance of data with almost 120 figures and tables, many of which
will prove invaluable for lecturers.' John Kelly, Industrial
Relations Journal
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