The extent to which organisational performance is related to the
Human Resource policies and practices adopted has been a question
debated by both academics and practitioners for the past two
decades. This book takes the debate into the international field by
drawing upon the well respected Cranet data set, which provides
longitudinal and comparative data drawn from 40 countries across
the world. International Human Resource Management highlights the
dominant institutional factors embedded in the societal contexts of
different cultures which impact on corporate HR policies and
practices, and illustrates how these variables influence Human
Resource Management and performance. It examines how the HR
function can impact upon HR policies and influence organisational
performance. It also discusses the role of the HR department;
specifically, how the distribution of responsibilities between HR
managers and line managers moderates the relationship between HR
strategic integration and organizational performance. Finally, it
investigates the impact of societal factors on the strategic
integration of female HR directors. These contributions show the
complexity of the relationship between HRM and organisational
performance, and modify the current prevailing models of this
relationship, where scant attention has been paid to institutional
forces and the cultural, economic and social contexts in which
organisations are located.
This book was originally published as a special issue of The
International Journal of Human Resource Management.
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