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Books > Business & Economics > Business & management > Office & workplace > General
Few time periods in the past five decades match the intensity of
intergroup conflict that people around the world are currently
experiencing. Polarized attitudes around various sociopolitical
issues, such as gender equality and immigration, have dominated the
media and our lives. Furthermore, these powerful social dynamics
have also impacted the places where we work and intensified
existing strains on workers and workplaces. To address these issues
and improve organizational climates, more theories, research and
collaborations to understand these phenomena are needed. The
volumes in this series will describe and instigate scholarship that
advances our understanding of diversity in organizations. In
recognition of the centennial anniversary of the ratification of
the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted American
women the right to vote and the subsequent struggle for women of
color to exercise it, this volume features the personal narratives
of recognized scholars in the field who have advanced understanding
of gender at work. In this way, we appreciate, and gain perspective
on, the rewards and challenges of this essential scholarship and
the lives of those who engage in it. The combination of these
narratives is an exciting and meaningful exploration of the study
of gender and its intersection with other marginalized social
identities at work that authentically captures the experiences of
scholars in the field and inventively pushes our understanding of
diversity in organizations.
Human Resources Management and Ethics: Responsibilities, Actions,
Issues, and Experiences, explores and provides an in-depth look at
the responsibilities, actions, issues and experiences related to
HRM and ethics for individual employees, organizations and the
broader society. Like other departments in the broader organization
HRM professionals will need to increasingly demonstrate how they
contribute to an organization's ethical orientation and overall
performance or success. While the ethical challenges, trends, and
issues impacting employees, organizations and HRM professionals
will continue to change over the years (consider the recent ethical
challenges related cybersecurity and data breaches) the bottom-line
of organization success is the clear reality that doing the right
thing or institutionalizing an ethical culture or character is just
as important to various stakeholders. The chapters in this book
provide an updated, current and future look at the relationship
between HRM and ethics and across various sectors or organizations
(i.e. public, private, not-for-profit, academic, etc.). That is,
this book discusses the ever evolving role of HRM professionals to
include discussion of how the profession continues to take on more
responsibility for developing and institutionalizing an ethical
culture in their organizations, industries and the broader society.
The book also contributes to the need for ongoing dialogue,
discussion or insights offered by HRM experts on what HRM
professionals and their organizations can do in the face of ethical
expectations, challenges and scandals. In the end, the book is
intended to increase our understanding of the ethical
responsibilities, actions, issues and experiences that arise both
within HRM and in HRM's interactions with individuals and
organizations.
This book examines the phenomenon of work suicides in France and
asks why, at the present historical juncture, conditions of work
can push individuals to take their own lives. During the 2000s,
France experienced what commentators have described as a 'suicide
epidemic', whereby increasing numbers of workers in the face of
extreme pressures of work, chose to kill themselves. The book
analyses a corpus of testimonial material linked to 66 suicide
cases across three large French companies during the period from
2005 to 2015. It aims to consider what the extreme and subjective
act of self-killing, narrated in suicide letters, can tell us about
the contemporary economic order and its impact on flesh and blood
bodies. What do rising work-related suicides reveal about
conditions of human labour in the twenty-first century? Does
neoliberal economics condition a desire for suicide? How do
suicidal individuals describe the causes and motivations of their
act? Combining critical perspectives from sociology, history,
testimony studies, economics, cultural studies and public health,
the book raises critical questions about the human costs of the
shift to a finance-driven neoliberal order and its everyday effects
within the French workplace.
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