Back to the Future: Implications for the Field of HRM of the Multistakeholder Perspective Proposed 30 Years Ago
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2015-05-01
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taverne
Abstract
Thirty years on from the seminal works on human resource management (HRM) by Beer et al., we examine how the subject has developed. We offer a normative review, based on that model and critique the assumption that the business of HRM is solely to improve returns to owners and shareholders. We identify the importance of a wider view of stakeholders to practitioners and how academic studies on the periphery of HRM are beginning to adopt such a view. We argue that the HRM studies so far have given us much valuable learning but that the subject has now reached a point where we need to take a wider, more contextual, more multilayered approach founded on the long-term needs of all relevant stakeholders. The original Beer et al. model remains a valuable guide to the next 30 years of HRM.
Keywords
Context, Harvard approach, Human resource management, Michigan approach, Multistakeholder perspective, Taverne, Management of Technology and Innovation, Strategy and Management, Applied Psychology, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Citation
Beer, M, Boselie, P & Brewster, C 2015, 'Back to the Future: Implications for the Field of HRM of the Multistakeholder Perspective Proposed 30 Years Ago', Human Resource Management, vol. 54, no. 3, pp. 427-438. https://doi.org/10.1002/hrm.21726