Employment Tribunals are the formal means of adjudicating disputes over individual employment rights in the UK. This article hypothesizes that, because small firms favour informality over formality, they are more likely (i) to experience employee claims than large firms; (ii) to be subject to different types of claims; (iii) to settle prior to reaching a formal Tribunal; and (iv) to lose at a Tribunal. Data from the 2003 Survey of Employment Tribunal Applications are used to examine these hypotheses. They are generally supported, although in relation to the third there was no size effect. Furthermore, our results show that firms that have procedures and follow them are more likely to win than those firms that do not have any procedures. Rec...
Business rhetoric and conventional theory expect that employment regulations will have negative effe...
The European Commission (EC) is updating the definition of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs)...
Small service enterprises have typically been neglected both by industrial relations researchers and...
Employment Tribunals are the formal means of adjudicating disputes over individual employment rights...
Employment tribunals, originally called industrial tribunals, were established 50 years ago in Great...
Since the 1980s policy-makers started paying more attention to the small business sector and subsequ...
The view that excessive regulation constrains small business growth has been a persistent theme with...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2000 Dr. Rowena Joy Barrett.In this thesis an integrated...
The perception is that formal representation is increasingly common in UK Employment Tribunals (ETs)...
Reports findings from an empirical investigation into the nature of the employment relationship in s...
Industrial relations in small firms, when they are defined in terms of their employment size, are ge...
Objectives The paper reports on one part of a research project that aims to improve understanding of...
The question under investigation in this paper is whether size is a determinant of union membership....
Small firms account for a substantial proportion of employment in advanced economies; yet understand...
This article examines the relationship between firm size and public sector tendering. The findings s...
Business rhetoric and conventional theory expect that employment regulations will have negative effe...
The European Commission (EC) is updating the definition of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs)...
Small service enterprises have typically been neglected both by industrial relations researchers and...
Employment Tribunals are the formal means of adjudicating disputes over individual employment rights...
Employment tribunals, originally called industrial tribunals, were established 50 years ago in Great...
Since the 1980s policy-makers started paying more attention to the small business sector and subsequ...
The view that excessive regulation constrains small business growth has been a persistent theme with...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2000 Dr. Rowena Joy Barrett.In this thesis an integrated...
The perception is that formal representation is increasingly common in UK Employment Tribunals (ETs)...
Reports findings from an empirical investigation into the nature of the employment relationship in s...
Industrial relations in small firms, when they are defined in terms of their employment size, are ge...
Objectives The paper reports on one part of a research project that aims to improve understanding of...
The question under investigation in this paper is whether size is a determinant of union membership....
Small firms account for a substantial proportion of employment in advanced economies; yet understand...
This article examines the relationship between firm size and public sector tendering. The findings s...
Business rhetoric and conventional theory expect that employment regulations will have negative effe...
The European Commission (EC) is updating the definition of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs)...
Small service enterprises have typically been neglected both by industrial relations researchers and...