Strategic Soft Human Resource Management - The Very Idea


Autoria(s): Ehrnrooth, Mats
Contribuinte(s)

Svenska handelshögskolan, institutionen för företagsledning och organisation, företagsledning och organisation

Hanken School of Economics, Department of Management and Organisation, Management and Organisation

Data(s)

18/05/2002

Resumo

On the one hand this thesis attempts to develop and empirically test an ethically defensible theorization of the relationship between human resource management (HRM) and competitive advantage. The specific empirical evidence indicates that at least part of HRM's causal influence on employee performance may operate indirectly through a social architecture and then through psychological empowerment. However, in particular the evidence concerning a potential influence of HRM on organizational performance seems to put in question some of the rhetorics within the HRM research community. On the other hand, the thesis tries to explicate and defend a certain attitude towards the philosophically oriented debates within organization science. This involves suggestions as to how we should understand meaning, reference, truth, justification and knowledge. In this understanding it is not fruitful to see either the problems or the solutions to the problems of empirical social science as fundamentally philosophical ones. It is argued that the notorious problems of social science, in this thesis exemplified by research on HRM, can be seen as related to dynamic complexity in combination with both the ethical and pragmatic difficulty of ”laboratory-like-experiments”. Solutions … can only be sought by informed trials and errors depending on the perceived familiarity with the object(s) of research. The odds are against anybody who hopes for clearly adequate social scientific answers to more complex questions. Social science is in particular unlikely to arrive at largely accepted knowledge of the kind ”if we do this, then that will happen”, or even ”if we do this, then that is likely to happen”. One of the problems probably facing most of the social scientific research communities is to specify and agree upon the ”this ” and the ”that” and provide convincing evidence of how they are (causally) related. On most more complex questions the role of social science seems largely to remain that of contributing to a (critical) conversation, rather than to arrive at more generally accepted knowledge. This is ultimately what is both argued and, in a sense, demonstrated using research on the relationship between HRM and organizational performance as an example.

Formato

1837 bytes

3414754 bytes

application/pdf

text/plain

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10227/79

URN:ISBN:951-555-724-0

951-555-724-0

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Svenska handelshögskolan

Hanken School of Economics

Relação

Economics and Society

105

Direitos

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Palavras-Chave #human resource management #strategic human resource management #organizational performance #employee performance #psychological empowerment #organizational commitment #organizational citizenship behavior #social science #organization science #Management and Organisation
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Väitöskirja

Doktorsavhandling

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