Labour relations policies in multinational companies: A three-country study of power dynamics

It is generally assumed that multinational companies will, to some extent at least, adapt their practices to host country environments. However, recent work suggests that this process of adaptation is yet more complex and uneven. It is our contention that subsidiary policy on labour relations is not...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of industrial relations 2015-04, Vol.57 (2), p.187-209
Hauptverfasser: Lévesque, Christian, Bensusán, Graciela, Murray, Gregor, Novick, Marta, Carrillo, Jorge, Gurrera, Ma. Silvana
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container_end_page 209
container_issue 2
container_start_page 187
container_title Journal of industrial relations
container_volume 57
creator Lévesque, Christian
Bensusán, Graciela
Murray, Gregor
Novick, Marta
Carrillo, Jorge
Gurrera, Ma. Silvana
description It is generally assumed that multinational companies will, to some extent at least, adapt their practices to host country environments. However, recent work suggests that this process of adaptation is yet more complex and uneven. It is our contention that subsidiary policy on labour relations is not simply the product of adaptation from and to home and host institutional environments but is in fact shaped by the multiple power relations that characterize multinational company subsidiaries. This three country comparison between Argentina, Canada, and Mexico shows that a policy of strong engagement with trade unions requires the presence of actors that can mobilize power resources. It is when both management and workers have power resources that subsidiaries are more likely to develop a policy of strong engagement with trade unions.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0022185614564377
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source PAIS Index; SAGE Complete
subjects Adaptation
Argentina
Canada
Economic analysis
Foreign subsidiaries
International comparisons
Labor relations
Labor unions
Labour market
Labour relations
Management theory
Mexico
Multinational corporations
Multinational enterprises
Studies
Subsidiary
Trade unions
title Labour relations policies in multinational companies: A three-country study of power dynamics
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