Human Resource Management 'with Chinese Characteristics': Facing the Challanges of Globalization

Five years into World Trade Organization membership, how is China’s system of people-management adaprting to the changing world? This edited book provides an up-to-date, state-of-the-art overview of current theory and practice of human resource management, ‘with Chinese characteristics’. The latter is a phrase used to refer to the specific cultural, institutional and social setting in which such management structures and processes are to be found in the ‘Middle Kingdom’.

As the People’s Republic of China becomes inexorably linked to the international economy and increasingly faces the challenges of globalization, its enterprises and their managers have to adapt to pressures to conform to external human resources and employment norms, whilst at the same time conforming to internal labour laws and socio-political demands. The tension between these two sets of factors provides an arena in which human resource managers, as well as workers, have to cope, perform and survive.

The papers included in this collection are all based on empirical on-site research by specialists in the field. They deal with such HRM-related topics are expatriates, family demands, human capital, joint ventures, labour disputes, organizational commitment, psychological contracts, social networks, work behaviour and the like. The authors of the papers covered in the book come from a variety of backgrounds and university affiliations in Australia, Canada, Finland, Hong Kong, Japan, People’s Republic of China, United Kingdom and United States of America.

1113964981
Human Resource Management 'with Chinese Characteristics': Facing the Challanges of Globalization

Five years into World Trade Organization membership, how is China’s system of people-management adaprting to the changing world? This edited book provides an up-to-date, state-of-the-art overview of current theory and practice of human resource management, ‘with Chinese characteristics’. The latter is a phrase used to refer to the specific cultural, institutional and social setting in which such management structures and processes are to be found in the ‘Middle Kingdom’.

As the People’s Republic of China becomes inexorably linked to the international economy and increasingly faces the challenges of globalization, its enterprises and their managers have to adapt to pressures to conform to external human resources and employment norms, whilst at the same time conforming to internal labour laws and socio-political demands. The tension between these two sets of factors provides an arena in which human resource managers, as well as workers, have to cope, perform and survive.

The papers included in this collection are all based on empirical on-site research by specialists in the field. They deal with such HRM-related topics are expatriates, family demands, human capital, joint ventures, labour disputes, organizational commitment, psychological contracts, social networks, work behaviour and the like. The authors of the papers covered in the book come from a variety of backgrounds and university affiliations in Australia, Canada, Finland, Hong Kong, Japan, People’s Republic of China, United Kingdom and United States of America.

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Human Resource Management 'with Chinese Characteristics': Facing the Challanges of Globalization

Human Resource Management 'with Chinese Characteristics': Facing the Challanges of Globalization

Human Resource Management 'with Chinese Characteristics': Facing the Challanges of Globalization

Human Resource Management 'with Chinese Characteristics': Facing the Challanges of Globalization

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Overview

Five years into World Trade Organization membership, how is China’s system of people-management adaprting to the changing world? This edited book provides an up-to-date, state-of-the-art overview of current theory and practice of human resource management, ‘with Chinese characteristics’. The latter is a phrase used to refer to the specific cultural, institutional and social setting in which such management structures and processes are to be found in the ‘Middle Kingdom’.

As the People’s Republic of China becomes inexorably linked to the international economy and increasingly faces the challenges of globalization, its enterprises and their managers have to adapt to pressures to conform to external human resources and employment norms, whilst at the same time conforming to internal labour laws and socio-political demands. The tension between these two sets of factors provides an arena in which human resource managers, as well as workers, have to cope, perform and survive.

The papers included in this collection are all based on empirical on-site research by specialists in the field. They deal with such HRM-related topics are expatriates, family demands, human capital, joint ventures, labour disputes, organizational commitment, psychological contracts, social networks, work behaviour and the like. The authors of the papers covered in the book come from a variety of backgrounds and university affiliations in Australia, Canada, Finland, Hong Kong, Japan, People’s Republic of China, United Kingdom and United States of America.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781317991250
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 09/13/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Malcolm Warner is at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, UK.

Table of Contents

1. Reassessing Human Resource Management ‘with Chinese Characteristics’: An Overview 2. Application of Human Capital Theory in China in the Context of the Knowledge Economy 3. Psychological Capital: A Potential Unlimited Chinese Human Resource for Competitive Advantage 4. Human Resource Management and the Globalness of Firms: An Empirical Study in China 5. Devolvement of HR Practices in Transitional Economies: Evidence from China 6. Understanding the Domain of Counterproductive Work Behaviour in China 7. Work and Family Demands and Life Stress Among Chinese Employees: The Mediating Effect of Work-Family Conflict 8. The Antecedents of Overseas Adjustment and Commitment of Expatriates in China 9. Organizational Commitment of Chinese Employees in Foreign Invested Firms 10. Emotional Bonds with Supervisors and Co-Workers: Relationship to Organizational Commitment in China’s Foreign Invested Companies 11. The Effect of Organizational Psychological Contract Violation on Managers’ Exit, Voice, Loyalty and Neglect in the Chinese Context 12. The HRM Regional Modeling and Entrepreneurship Strategies in China

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