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Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
'Social value' is a hot topic/buzz word developed from CSR,
Sustainable Design and placemaking The book contains useful
practical examples, think pieces from professionals, infographics,
and input from academics and professionals across a variety of
areas No other book provides such practical guidance for those
looking to create social value in built environment and indeed
other related projects and organisations
'Social value' is a hot topic/buzz word developed from CSR,
Sustainable Design and placemaking The book contains useful
practical examples, think pieces from professionals, infographics,
and input from academics and professionals across a variety of
areas No other book provides such practical guidance for those
looking to create social value in built environment and indeed
other related projects and organisations
While the concept of social value is not new, recent interest in
social value in construction has grown because of new social
procurement legislation around the world and an increasing
acceptance of the need to ensure construction projects provide
social value, rather than simply economic value. Despite this
growing recognition, literature and professional guidance on the
subject is hard to find. This is the first book looking at social
value in construction and it sets the agenda by asking and
answering important questions like: How is the construction
industry developing and supporting social enterprise and social
value and for who? How and when is the industry recording and
measuring social value and its effect? Which organisations are
doing things well and what can we learn from their experiences?
What can industry players do together to consolidate efforts and
drive improvements? What are the key challenges in the field and
what does the future look like? Drawing on a variety of
professional and academic experiences and disciplines, the authors
present global perspectives and lay the foundations for creating
social value in the construction industry. This timely book makes
use of real-life case studies and examples of best practice to
demonstrate how innovative companies can utilise contemporary
research to create social value through their projects. It is time
the construction industry viewed community involvement and
corporate social responsibility as an opportunity rather than a
risk, and this is the book that shows the industry how. This is
essential reading for all professionals in the construction,
engineering, architecture and built environment sector. In
particular, project managers, clients, contract managers, quantity
surveyors, CSR and HR personnel will gain a lot from reading this
book.
Construction is one of the most challenging industrial environments
for effective people management. It is characterised by
geographically dispersed projects, production-oriented management
styles, long working hours, high levels of staff turnover and
employment practices grounded in the traditional 'personnel'
paradigm. The employee resourcing function - recruitment, selection
and deployment - is largely reactive and intuitive, and fails to
draw on the longer-term benefits of strategic human resource
management (SHRM). This book explores the challenges inherent in
employee resourcing in-depth. It provides insights into the
strategic considerations and operational approaches adopted by
large construction organisations in deploying their human
resources. It presents an improved framework for informed
SHRM-style decision-making derived from an extensive study
conducted within eight major construction organisations. This book
provides a valuable resource for both students and practitioners
interested in evaluating and improving current organisational
practice.
Construction is one of the most challenging industrial environments
for effective people management. It is characterised by
geographically dispersed projects, production-oriented management
styles, long working hours, high levels of staff turnover and
employment practices grounded in the traditional 'personnel'
paradigm. The employee resourcing function - recruitment, selection
and deployment - is largely reactive and intuitive, and fails to
draw on the longer-term benefits of strategic human resource
management (SHRM). This book explores the challenges inherent in
employee resourcing in-depth. It provides insights into the
strategic considerations and operational approaches adopted by
large construction organisations in deploying their human
resources. It presents an improved framework for informed
SHRM-style decision-making derived from an extensive study
conducted within eight major construction organisations. This book
provides a valuable resource for both students and practitioners
interested in evaluating and improving current organisational
practice.
While the concept of social value is not new, recent interest in
social value in construction has grown because of new social
procurement legislation around the world and an increasing
acceptance of the need to ensure construction projects provide
social value, rather than simply economic value. Despite this
growing recognition, literature and professional guidance on the
subject is hard to find. This is the first book looking at social
value in construction and it sets the agenda by asking and
answering important questions like: How is the construction
industry developing and supporting social enterprise and social
value and for who? How and when is the industry recording and
measuring social value and its effect? Which organisations are
doing things well and what can we learn from their experiences?
What can industry players do together to consolidate efforts and
drive improvements? What are the key challenges in the field and
what does the future look like? Drawing on a variety of
professional and academic experiences and disciplines, the authors
present global perspectives and lay the foundations for creating
social value in the construction industry. This timely book makes
use of real-life case studies and examples of best practice to
demonstrate how innovative companies can utilise contemporary
research to create social value through their projects. It is time
the construction industry viewed community involvement and
corporate social responsibility as an opportunity rather than a
risk, and this is the book that shows the industry how. This is
essential reading for all professionals in the construction,
engineering, architecture and built environment sector. In
particular, project managers, clients, contract managers, quantity
surveyors, CSR and HR personnel will gain a lot from reading this
book.
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