Abstract Most of the research about HRM and IR practices of MNCs in their host country has been conducted in deregulated countries such as the UK and the US. Host countries with relatively weak institutional arrangements facilitate the transfer of home-country practices. In contrast, those with institutionally strong systems, such as Germany, impose stronger pressures for adaptation. This paper reports research about nine US and four UK subsidiaries operating in Germany. It examines how their HRM and IR practices are shaped by German labour and IR institutions, how they differ from a control group of indigenous rms and what room for manoeuvre is left for the introduction of home-country practices. The main conclusions are that small and me...
Because the extent to which multinational companies (MNCs) benefit from foreign subsidiaries depends...
NoOne of the central questions in the literature on MNCs is the extent to which their subsidiaries a...
This article presents a study of the degree to which national institutional settings impact on the a...
Most of the research about HRM and IR practices of MNCs in their host country has been conducted in ...
Most human resource management (HRM) research has been conducted in countries that have relatively w...
This research examines human resource management (HRM) in subsidiaries of US multinational firms (MN...
There are three Human Resource Management related issues that have attracted considerable interest i...
Institutional theory claims that organizations interested in gaining legitimacy might have to adapt ...
This study sets out to explore human resource management (HRM) practices in multinational corporatio...
[Abstract]: This paper analyses the International Human Resource Management (IHRM) approaches that G...
peer-reviewedThis thesis provides an in-depth comparative analysis of the factors influencing local ...
While there is a large body of academic debate surrounding human resource management issues in multi...
Contains fulltext : 68598.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The impact of ...
ABSTRACT The aim of this research work is to find out about the transfer of human resource managemen...
While there is a large body of academic debate surrounding human resource management issues in MNCs,...
Because the extent to which multinational companies (MNCs) benefit from foreign subsidiaries depends...
NoOne of the central questions in the literature on MNCs is the extent to which their subsidiaries a...
This article presents a study of the degree to which national institutional settings impact on the a...
Most of the research about HRM and IR practices of MNCs in their host country has been conducted in ...
Most human resource management (HRM) research has been conducted in countries that have relatively w...
This research examines human resource management (HRM) in subsidiaries of US multinational firms (MN...
There are three Human Resource Management related issues that have attracted considerable interest i...
Institutional theory claims that organizations interested in gaining legitimacy might have to adapt ...
This study sets out to explore human resource management (HRM) practices in multinational corporatio...
[Abstract]: This paper analyses the International Human Resource Management (IHRM) approaches that G...
peer-reviewedThis thesis provides an in-depth comparative analysis of the factors influencing local ...
While there is a large body of academic debate surrounding human resource management issues in multi...
Contains fulltext : 68598.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The impact of ...
ABSTRACT The aim of this research work is to find out about the transfer of human resource managemen...
While there is a large body of academic debate surrounding human resource management issues in MNCs,...
Because the extent to which multinational companies (MNCs) benefit from foreign subsidiaries depends...
NoOne of the central questions in the literature on MNCs is the extent to which their subsidiaries a...
This article presents a study of the degree to which national institutional settings impact on the a...