This study examines whether German multinationals operating in an Anglo-Saxon setting design their employee relations primarily on the German or the Anglo-Saxon model. The authors’ cross-sectional comparison with UK-owned firms provides no evidence of a transfer of the current German approach but does point to a distinctive Germanic version of the ‘high-road’ variant of the Anglo-Saxon approach. Intra-German analysis shows that this is most pronounced among the types of subsidiaries that are particularly significant for disseminating employment relations innovations across the multinational, but that these also have the highest incidence of collective arrangements and the lowest incidence of the ‘low-road’ variant of the Anglo-Saxon approac...
NoThis paper is based on a comparative study of the UK and German operations of the McDonald’s Corpo...
noDas hoch regulierte deutsche Arbeitsbeziehungsmodell steht immer wieder in der Kritik. Gelegentlic...
"In this paper, we examine employment relationships as an important dimension of the 'German model'....
NoThis study examines whether German multinationals operating in an Anglo-Saxon setting design their...
In light of current changes in the German industrial relations’ landscape and the wider and deeper i...
In light of current changes in the German industrial relations¿ landscape and the wider and deeper i...
Based on a representative survey of German subsidiaries in the UK, their parent companies and a comp...
noInterest has grown in the significance of the country-of-origin impact on the Employment Relation...
This paper discusses whether in view of the accumulated contextual pressures the evolving new German...
The paper examines whether in light of heightened globalisastion pressures, German multinational co...
The paper discusses whether in view of the accumulated contextual pressures the evolving new German...
Abstract Most of the research about HRM and IR practices of MNCs in their host country has been cond...
This article investigates the effects of negotiated and unilaterally imposed change on employee rela...
This article investigates the relative importance and variability of the country-of-origin effect in...
This paper critically reviews literature on the behaviour of US-based Multi National Companies (MNCs...
NoThis paper is based on a comparative study of the UK and German operations of the McDonald’s Corpo...
noDas hoch regulierte deutsche Arbeitsbeziehungsmodell steht immer wieder in der Kritik. Gelegentlic...
"In this paper, we examine employment relationships as an important dimension of the 'German model'....
NoThis study examines whether German multinationals operating in an Anglo-Saxon setting design their...
In light of current changes in the German industrial relations’ landscape and the wider and deeper i...
In light of current changes in the German industrial relations¿ landscape and the wider and deeper i...
Based on a representative survey of German subsidiaries in the UK, their parent companies and a comp...
noInterest has grown in the significance of the country-of-origin impact on the Employment Relation...
This paper discusses whether in view of the accumulated contextual pressures the evolving new German...
The paper examines whether in light of heightened globalisastion pressures, German multinational co...
The paper discusses whether in view of the accumulated contextual pressures the evolving new German...
Abstract Most of the research about HRM and IR practices of MNCs in their host country has been cond...
This article investigates the effects of negotiated and unilaterally imposed change on employee rela...
This article investigates the relative importance and variability of the country-of-origin effect in...
This paper critically reviews literature on the behaviour of US-based Multi National Companies (MNCs...
NoThis paper is based on a comparative study of the UK and German operations of the McDonald’s Corpo...
noDas hoch regulierte deutsche Arbeitsbeziehungsmodell steht immer wieder in der Kritik. Gelegentlic...
"In this paper, we examine employment relationships as an important dimension of the 'German model'....