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'This volume presents precisely the types of problems facing HR
professionals in multinational corporations and reveals the many
challenges of bridging across cultures and legal systems.' - Howard
Salazar, Manager of HR Operations, Harley-Davidson Motor Company,
US 'In aligning human resource management with the legal
requirements in different countries, multinational corporations
have to simultaneously stay true to their corporate culture and
honor the distinct cultures where they do business. This volume
provides deep insights for navigating this terrain in the 21st
Century.' - Pat Canavan, Senior Vice President for Global
Governance, Motorola Corporation (retired), US 'Leading a global HR
function requires a deep appreciation of many cultures and laws,
which are at the center of this important new book. Organizing the
learning around tangible problems is a great approach - valuable
for experienced practitioners and newly appointed HR professionals
alike.' - Cheri Alexander, Vice President, HR International
Operations, General Motors (retired), US Multinational corporations
face considerable complexity in setting the terms and conditions of
employment. Differing national laws prevent firms from developing
consistent sets of employment policies, but, at the same time,
employees are often expected to work closely with colleagues
located in many different countries and seek comparable treatment.
This critical volume offers a comprehensive analysis of how these
contradictory issues are dealt with in five countries - Australia,
Brazil, Germany, Japan and the United States. The authors identify
six key areas that present the most typical challenges: employee
voice (unionization and works councils), discrimination, privacy,
wrongful dismissal, compensation and benefits administration, and
global supply chain and labor standards. Working within these broad
categories, legal experts from each country offer a detailed
breakdown of twenty commonly confronted human resource problems and
the ways in which national laws affect their solutions. Using a
unique combination of primary sources, discussion questions and
expert analyses, this pioneering volume provides readers with a new
and intensive picture of human resource management across the
world. Human resources managers and other practitioners will find
this book an indispensable resource. The structure and approach
make it an ideal classroom text for students of business and
management, labor law and other related fields. Instructors from
other than the five countries can easily supplement analysis of the
problems by reference to their domestic systems, which gives this
work added flexibility and relevance.
'This volume presents precisely the types of problems facing HR
professionals in multinational corporations and reveals the many
challenges of bridging across cultures and legal systems.' - Howard
Salazar, Manager of HR Operations, Harley-Davidson Motor Company,
US 'In aligning human resource management with the legal
requirements in different countries, multinational corporations
have to simultaneously stay true to their corporate culture and
honor the distinct cultures where they do business. This volume
provides deep insights for navigating this terrain in the 21st
Century.' - Pat Canavan, Senior Vice President for Global
Governance, Motorola Corporation (retired), US 'Leading a global HR
function requires a deep appreciation of many cultures and laws,
which are at the center of this important new book. Organizing the
learning around tangible problems is a great approach - valuable
for experienced practitioners and newly appointed HR professionals
alike.' - Cheri Alexander, Vice President, HR International
Operations, General Motors (retired), US Multinational corporations
face considerable complexity in setting the terms and conditions of
employment. Differing national laws prevent firms from developing
consistent sets of employment policies, but, at the same time,
employees are often expected to work closely with colleagues
located in many different countries and seek comparable treatment.
This critical volume offers a comprehensive analysis of how these
contradictory issues are dealt with in five countries - Australia,
Brazil, Germany, Japan and the United States. The authors identify
six key areas that present the most typical challenges: employee
voice (unionization and works councils), discrimination, privacy,
wrongful dismissal, compensation and benefits administration, and
global supply chain and labor standards. Working within these broad
categories, legal experts from each country offer a detailed
breakdown of twenty commonly confronted human resource problems and
the ways in which national laws affect their solutions. Using a
unique combination of primary sources, discussion questions and
expert analyses, this pioneering volume provides readers with a new
and intensive picture of human resource management across the
world. Human resources managers and other practitioners will find
this book an indispensable resource. The structure and approach
make it an ideal classroom text for students of business and
management, labor law and other related fields. Instructors from
other than the five countries can easily supplement analysis of the
problems by reference to their domestic systems, which gives this
work added flexibility and relevance.
Labour Law in Motion reprints sixteen reports originally submitted
to the seventh Comparative Labor Law Seminar (Tokyo Seminar)
sponsored by the Japan Institute for Labour Policy and Training in
March 2004. Eleven expert authors describe the situation in their
respective countries and emphasize recent and ongoing changes in
their countries' labour laws. Each author concludes that reform of
traditional labour laws is indeed necessary. However, the book as a
whole clearly demonstrates that the content of such reform differs
from country to country, particularly in the extent to which labour
law entrusts the regulation of working conditions to the market.
Offering as it does a clear and concise summary of the recent and
current experience of labour relations in eight major
industrialized countries, "Labour law in Motion is an essential
resource for professionals and officials engaged in any aspect of
labour law or regulation in any country.
The role of state or the function of labour law during
industrialization in Asian countries is of utmost importance when
examining how Asian labour laws differ from European or American
labour law models and whether or not any common characteristics
exist in Asian labour law. The seven national reports (Australia,
China, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan) included in
this volume provide an overview of the regulation of union
organization, collective bargaining, and industrial disputes. These
reports also analyze the role of government in industrial relations
in the course of economic development. In regulations on formation
of labour unions, some countries, such as Japan, have the least
government intervention whereas other countries, for example Korea
and Taiwan, have experienced more direct government control through
imposition of certain forms of labour unions or registration
requirements and procedures. The same applies to regulations on
collective bargaining and industrial disputes. For instance, in
Korea, Taiwan and Malaysia violation of collective agreements is
not only sanctioned by civil liability but is also criminally
punished. A review of the national reports reveals that while
diversity in labour laws exists in the Asian countries represented,
the significant role of government in labour relations is widely
recognized. Whether the government's significant role in industrial
relations in Asian countries is a transitional phenomena which
takes place during economic development and maturity of democracy,
or whether Asian labour law is heading for a new labour law model
which differs from the western model, should be further examined.
The national papers in this volume provide fundamental information
on current labour laws in Asian countries and on comparable
characteristics in western labour law models.
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