Employee Relations Dr. Harold Griffin HSA 530: Health Services Human Resource Management February 23‚ 2012 Introduction Employee Relations involves the body of work concerned with maintaining employer-employee relationships that contribute to satisfactory productivity‚ motivation‚ and morale (Hopkins & Hampton‚ 1995). Essentially‚ employee relations is concerned with preventing and resolving problems involving individuals which arise out of or affect work situations. This paper will
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State Insurance Act‚ 1948 36 c) 51 Employees Provident Fund And Misc. Provisions Act‚ 1952 d) The Employment Exchanges (Compulsory Notification of 55 Vacancies) Act‚ 1959 e) Factories Act‚ 1948 58 f) Industrial Disputes Act‚ 1947 74 g) Labour Laws (Exemption From Furnishing Returns & Maintaining 80 Registers By Certain Establishments) Act‚ 1988 h) Payment of Bonus Act‚ 1965 83 i) Payment of Gratuity Act‚ 1972 87 j) Workmen’s
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Industrial Relations: Ideological Perspectives By Femi Aborisade Centre for Labour Studies & The Polytechnic‚ Ibadan aborisadefemi@gmail.com INTRODUCTION This paper identifies the key theories in industrial relations and draws out their implications on the concern for achieving ‘basic needs for all’. The following theories are examined: the political theories of Unitarism and Pluralism; the economistic theory; the democratic and political theory; the moral and ethical theory‚ and the
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IPM Professional Qualification in Human Resource Management Management Case Study 8 Industrial Relations Batch ID PQHRM 22/07 Question 6 The problems that have arisen‚ findings have been considered and recommendations have been given from points 1 to 5. Question 1 Company could not or did not adapt to the changing market conditions. They did not change their strategies of production and did not properly analyze the market conditions. Due to the incompetence
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INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS PERSPECTIVES UNITARY THEORY Workplace “has one source of authority and one source of loyalty” (Fox 1996: p. 3) - Dunlop (1958) argues that in a unitary theory‚ work organizations are integrated institutions with workers and management working in harmony. - Thus no conflict thesis is a dubious integration. It thrives on assumptions that all workers identify not only with the aims of the enterprise but also with the operating methods (Seifert 1992)
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cause to workers’ leaders like Rajan Nair‚ others to Telco officials like Mehrunkar. The genesis of the phenomena however lay in the history of industrial relations in Telco over nearly fifteen years. Pune was one of the first industrial centres to be established pursuant to the policy of geographic relocation of industries away from established industrial centres in the early sixties. During the sixties a number of large engineering companies set up new industries in the Pune region. Being predominantly
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Production Course Name : Major Project (Practicum) Submitted to : Sandra O’Meally / Lloyd Waller Submitted by (Group) : Group 8 – Industrial & Employee Relations Student I.D.# s : (see Appendix 6) Tel.#s (work) : (see Appendix 6) Tel.#s (home) : (see Appendix 6) Title of Assignment : Industrial & Employee Relations in Telegens Inc. Date of Submission : March 12‚ 2006 CERTIFICATION OF AUTHORSHIP: We certify that we are the authors of this paper and that any
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Industrial relations is used to denote the collective relationships between management and the workers. Traditionally‚ the term industrial relations is used to cover such aspects of industrial life as trade unionism‚ collective bargaining‚ workers’ participation in management‚ discipline and grievance handling‚ industrial disputes and interpretation of labor laws and rules and code of conduct. In the words of Lester‚ "Industrial relations involve attempts at arriving at solutions between the
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(1992 onwards) 1.1.1 Import Substitution/ Plan Era (1947 to 1991): For three of the five decades (1950-80)‚ India steadily grew at the so-called “Hindu rate of growth” of three and a half percent. During the remaining period‚ it grew at rates between 5 and 6 percent. Indian economic policy during this period was mainly influenced by the colonial experience (which was seen by Indian leaders as exploitative in nature). This economic policy tended towards: – protectionism‚ with a strong emphasis
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HOW COMPONENTS OF EACH OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS THAT AFFECT INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS It is common knowledge that industrial relations cannot exist in isolation as it takes place within a system comprising of factors‚ each of which affects all the other factors. A change in one factor will bring about a change in each of the other factors. It goes without saying therefore that certain external forces influence the industrial relations system and in turn‚ it also impacts on the outside environment
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