Corporate contractarian literature dismisses employee participation as inefficient on the grounds that, if it were efficient, it would be voluntarily adopted widely. We argue that the scarcity of employee participation in the UK can be attributed to shareholder short-termism and behavioural biases and, therefore, that the question of its efficiency remains open for companies that want to explore this possibility. We thus propose a flexible approach that UK companies can follow to implement employee participation. Our approach takes into account the broader UK institutional framework by creating adaptable and long-term solutions for both listed and large private companies. We argue that the most pragmatic way to encourage efficient employee ...
This paper builds on a theoretical framework developed by Ridley-Duff and Ponton (2013) to advance r...
Pt. I Introduction -- 1.Conceptualizing Employee Participation in Organizations / Adrian Wilkinson /...
UK public companies have a problem; they have become what Lord Myners refers to as ‘ownerless corpor...
orporate contractarian literature dismisses employee participation as inefficient on the grounds tha...
This article examines the effects of employee ownership and employee participation on corporate gove...
he March 2000 Budget in the UK introduced tax incentives to encourage employee shareholding. The the...
Purpose The paper traces the development of employee ownership in the UK since the 1980s. It propos...
The March 2000 Budget in the UK introduced tax incentives to encourage employee shareholding. The th...
This paper examines the institutional characteristics of UK ESOPs and considers the extent to which ...
The paper aims to explore contemporary developments of the debate on employees’ participation and wo...
This paper tests the participation constraint by examining the workings of the executive labour mark...
Involving labour in decision-making has the potential to improve corporate governance, even in adver...
This paper reviews the main strands of research on employee share ownership over the last forty year...
Prevailing patterns of dispersed share ownership and rules of corporate governance for UK listed com...
The paper examines the role of employees in governance. The paper highlights from a theory basis tha...
This paper builds on a theoretical framework developed by Ridley-Duff and Ponton (2013) to advance r...
Pt. I Introduction -- 1.Conceptualizing Employee Participation in Organizations / Adrian Wilkinson /...
UK public companies have a problem; they have become what Lord Myners refers to as ‘ownerless corpor...
orporate contractarian literature dismisses employee participation as inefficient on the grounds tha...
This article examines the effects of employee ownership and employee participation on corporate gove...
he March 2000 Budget in the UK introduced tax incentives to encourage employee shareholding. The the...
Purpose The paper traces the development of employee ownership in the UK since the 1980s. It propos...
The March 2000 Budget in the UK introduced tax incentives to encourage employee shareholding. The th...
This paper examines the institutional characteristics of UK ESOPs and considers the extent to which ...
The paper aims to explore contemporary developments of the debate on employees’ participation and wo...
This paper tests the participation constraint by examining the workings of the executive labour mark...
Involving labour in decision-making has the potential to improve corporate governance, even in adver...
This paper reviews the main strands of research on employee share ownership over the last forty year...
Prevailing patterns of dispersed share ownership and rules of corporate governance for UK listed com...
The paper examines the role of employees in governance. The paper highlights from a theory basis tha...
This paper builds on a theoretical framework developed by Ridley-Duff and Ponton (2013) to advance r...
Pt. I Introduction -- 1.Conceptualizing Employee Participation in Organizations / Adrian Wilkinson /...
UK public companies have a problem; they have become what Lord Myners refers to as ‘ownerless corpor...