Managing change in a unionized workplace : countervailing collaboration
著者
書誌事項
Managing change in a unionized workplace : countervailing collaboration
Quorum, 2000
- : alk. paper
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-252) and index.
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Unlike other labor law and management books, Blackard's comprehensive new work not only examines legal, strategic human resources management, change management, and related labor/management relations issues, but also offers easily grasped and applied methods for addressing all of these issues. Labor relations should be a fully integrated part of a systemic approach to human resource management, argues Blackard. He challenges the feasibility of ad hoc programs and labor/management partnerships, but encourages collaboration within the context of both parties' interests and roles. His book provides a philosophy and set of practices to manage change and improve the labor/management relationship in the unionized workplace.
Companies with poor union relationships rarely have union problems; they have management problems. The crux is that managing change is a special challenge. To help executives address the challenge, Blackard first reviews the state of labor relations and discusses key differences between managing change in union and non-union settings. He presents a philosophy based on collaboration of countervailing interests and an integrated model for change management that is uniquely applicable in unionized workplaces. He then discusses the application of management practices based on such concepts as organizational learning, systems theory, trust, power, mutual gains negotiations, and supplemental teams that support the countervailing collaboration concept. By seeing labor relations as part of a broader human resource management system, one can identify and better understand many of the questions that inevitably rise when faced with the need for rapid and often drastic change.
目次
Acknowledgments Introduction Perspective Background Legal Framework Resistance Philosophy Countervailing Collaboration Change Model Practices Business Driver Systems Thinking Learning and Growth Mutual Trust The Power Paradox Mutual Gains Bargaining Supplemental Teams Moving Forward Selected Bibliography
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