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This book showcases issues of work and employment in contemporary
India through a critical lens, serving as a systematic, scholarly
and rigorous resource which provides an alternate view to the
glowing metanarrative of the subcontinent's ongoing economic growth
in today's globalized world. Critical approaches ensure that
divergent and marginalized voices are highlighted, promoting a more
measured perspective of entrenched standpoints. In casting social
reality differently, a quest for solutions that reshape current
dynamics is triggered. The volume spans five thematic areas,
subsuming a range of economic sectors. India is a pre-eminent
destination for offshoring, underscoring the relevance of global
production networks (Theme 1). Yet, the creation of jobs has not
transformed employment patterns in the country but rather
accentuated informalization and casualization (Theme 2). Indeed,
even India's ICT-related sectors, perceived as mascots of modernity
and vehicles for upward mobility, raise questions about the extent
of social upgrading (Theme 3). Nonetheless, these various
developments have not been accompanied by collective action -
instead, there is growing evidence of diminished pluralistic
employment relations strategies (Theme 4). Emergent concerns about
work and employment such as gestational surrogacy and expatriate
experiences attest to the evolving complexities associated with
offshoring (Theme 5).
This book showcases empirical studies on workplace bullying from a
range of Asian countries, including China, India, Indonesia,
Israel, Japan, Jordan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Singapore, South Korea,
Sri Lanka, Thailand, UAE and Vietnam, and is the first-of-its-kind
single academic project documenting workplace emotional abuse in
the world's largest continent. It encompasses the 'varieties of
workplace bullying' conceptualization in addition to category-based
harassment and abusive supervision, and presents target, bystander
and interventionist perspectives, along with contextualized
insights into the phenomenon. The book speaks to the significance
of sociocultural factors and draws on several theoretical and
substantive bases including dignity, social cynicism, coping,
gender, sexual orientation, job insecurity, turnover intention,
affective events theory, attribution theory, regulation and policy
initiatives. Covering all major regions in Asia where workplace
bullying has been found to occur, namely West Asia, South Asia,
Southeast Asia and East Asia, the book portrays studies which
engage both positivist and postpositivist paradigms, utilize an
array of methods and include a range of industrial sectors and
employment contracts and all levels of the organization. While
focused on Asia, the book's insights have international relevance
and are of interest to the worldwide community of researchers,
practitioners and students of organizational studies, human
resource management, industrial sociology, work psychology,
industrial relations, labour law, corporate law, health sciences,
social work and Asian studies.
This book showcases issues of work and employment in contemporary
India through a critical lens, serving as a systematic, scholarly
and rigorous resource which provides an alternate view to the
glowing metanarrative of the subcontinent's ongoing economic growth
in today's globalized world. Critical approaches ensure that
divergent and marginalized voices are highlighted, promoting a more
measured perspective of entrenched standpoints. In casting social
reality differently, a quest for solutions that reshape current
dynamics is triggered. The volume spans five thematic areas,
subsuming a range of economic sectors. India is a pre-eminent
destination for offshoring, underscoring the relevance of global
production networks (Theme 1). Yet, the creation of jobs has not
transformed employment patterns in the country but rather
accentuated informalization and casualization (Theme 2). Indeed,
even India's ICT-related sectors, perceived as mascots of modernity
and vehicles for upward mobility, raise questions about the extent
of social upgrading (Theme 3). Nonetheless, these various
developments have not been accompanied by collective action -
instead, there is growing evidence of diminished pluralistic
employment relations strategies (Theme 4). Emergent concerns about
work and employment such as gestational surrogacy and expatriate
experiences attest to the evolving complexities associated with
offshoring (Theme 5).
Workplace bullying, emotional abuse and harassment unfolds as a
process, usually recursive and escalating, that involves multiple
actors and stakeholders. Through Section 1 of this volume, the
antecedents and effects of workplace bullying, emotional abuse and
harassment are detailed. Apart from discussing individual and
organizational causative factors and adverse outcomes for targets
and organizations, this section presents issues pertaining to
target coping and survival and power versus powerlessness as
dialectic rather than sovereign. Emergent research examining the
physiological impact on targets, the controversial interplay of
personality and the striving towards well-being is showcased.
Section 2 brings together chapters on the various key players in
the workplace bullying, emotional abuse and harassment scenario.
The focus here is on targets, bullies, bystanders, leaders and
significant others as well as the range of interventionists (such
as HR managers, therapists, organizational practitioners, unionists
and so on) who address situations of misbehaviour. The motives,
experiences and outcomes of the former group and the roles,
dilemmas and challenges of the latter group are elaborated.
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