100% found this document useful (3 votes)
5K views38 pages

Dunlop Model

The unitary perspective views the employment relationship as harmonious, with common interests between management and employees. Conflict is seen as irrational and aberrant. Trade unions are seen as intrusive and a challenge to management's right to manage. The pluralist perspective sees differing interests between groups and sees some level of conflict as inevitable due to differing objectives. Conflict is resolved through negotiation and compromise. Trade unions are seen as legitimate and an integral part of the employment relationship. Human resource management within a unitary frame emphasizes integrating and manipulating employees to achieve business objectives.

Uploaded by

akruti_sharma
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (3 votes)
5K views38 pages

Dunlop Model

The unitary perspective views the employment relationship as harmonious, with common interests between management and employees. Conflict is seen as irrational and aberrant. Trade unions are seen as intrusive and a challenge to management's right to manage. The pluralist perspective sees differing interests between groups and sees some level of conflict as inevitable due to differing objectives. Conflict is resolved through negotiation and compromise. Trade unions are seen as legitimate and an integral part of the employment relationship. Human resource management within a unitary frame emphasizes integrating and manipulating employees to achieve business objectives.

Uploaded by

akruti_sharma
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 38

CH 1

The approaches of Industrial Relations

Learning objectives
y Understand the different views of the

employment relationship and the interaction in an IR System y Explain the integral nature of the concept of conflict, cooperation and regulations y Identify the importantce and difficulties of comparing industrial relations in different countries. y Appreciate the character of labour process and labour market within capitalism and the interrelationship between macro and micro employment issues

Introduction
y Industrial society is a complex and dynamic

society (consist of group, societies and institution) they are interrelated, however have different attitudes and perceptions. They are also being influenced by external environment. y We cannot ignore the working aspect of human being, as working hour dominate most of our time.

contd
There are different types of organizations: 1.Big organization, small organization, local or international. 2. They constitute of 3 main actors: y Shareholder- represented by management, association of employers. Always to gain as much profit and productivity. y Employees- being represented by trade unions. To get good salary and good working conditions y Government; being represented by specialize government agencies concern with workers, enterprise and their relationship. Try create industrial harmony Each of the actors above always conflicting between one another in order to achieve their objectives. 3. Besides the above 3 main actors, in the present context academicians have also considered another actor which can also influence the nature of IR i.e Stakeholders.

y Does industrial harmony between the three

actors can be easily achieve particularly between employees and management?. y To moderate their conflict, the interference of the government is crucial. Government influence the relationship by introducing rules and regulations and some code of industrial harmony. Within the Malaysia contact, some of the related rules are: industrial relation acts, trade union acts, employment act, code of Industrial harmony and etc. (pls. refer to Ministry of HR website).

Definition IR
y Industrial relations encompasses a set of

phenomena, both inside and outside the workplace, concern with determining and regulating employment relationship

What is Industrial Relations?


A particular set of phenomena associated with regulating the human activity of employment y The making and administering of the institutions and rules of work regulation
y Socio-industrial conflict (in all its forms)

and its resolution


y Explicit and implicit bargaining between

employees and employers

Industrial Relations
y Much of Industrial Relations at lower level of

study place considerable emphasis on factual approach. - Author concentrated their efforts in describing situations as they saw it - they produce guide book rather than theories and explanations. Eg. Describing union structure, laws etc.

y In studying IR it is easier to study and to discuss

through frame of reference. Frame of reference; each person perceive and interpret events by mean of conceptual structure of generalizations or contexts postulate about what is essential, assumptions as what is valuable, attitude about what is possible and ideas about what will work effectively. It constitutes the frame of reference of that person.

The nature of employment organization

Approaches to industrial relations


Approaches to organisations

Unitary
Authoritarian Paternalism

Pluralistic
Co-operation Conflict Approaches to industrial relations

Marxist
Evolution Revolution

Input Conflict (differences)

Conversion Institutions and processes

Output Regulation (rules)

Human resource management Labour market

Systems

Social action

Wider approaches to industrial relations

Control of the labour process

Comparative

Unitary perspective
y Assumptions

Capitalist society  Integrated group of people within the work organization  Common values, interests and objectives y Nature of conflict and its resolution  Irrational and aberrant ( straying from the path)  If there is/are conflict, they are Frictional and personal  Coercion (force) or paternalism (limiting freedom through regulation) y Role of Trade Unions  Intrusion from outside  Historical anachronism (relating to a wrong period)  Management only forced to accept trade unions in economic relations


Unitary view
Organization is: y A group that united y Having same objectives y Single authority/kepatuhan yang satu y common value, interest and objectives (nilai, minat dan objektif yang sama) y Managers have the right to manage, managers have prerogative to make decisions. Those who challange is not rasional.

y The unitary perspective has a great deal of

support in industry and government. Eg. Based on research the bulk of British mgrs. Maintain a preference for unitary in decision making. e,.g pronounce hostility to the power of trade unions, limited amount of personal commitment to collective presentation. y What is your view about Malaysia?

y So is in the government. For example in UK

unitary perspective play important part in the UK IR Act 1971, one of the aim of the act was to reduce the incidence of what was termed disruptive and disorderly behavior by the use of external legal control. y What is your view about Malaysia?

y Unitary also has considerable support in the

academic sphere. A great deal of work in human relations school fall into this category- it emphasizes the important of social relations in industry. It stresses that conflict is the result of poor social relations, to overcome they suggest for ex. Better communication, they ignore differences in interest the source of conflict.

to
y According to Fox this view of organization had

been abandon as incongruent with reality, but it should not be discard lightly. It provide subconscious foundation (the right to manage) for mgrs seeking to maintain clear distinction between those issues they prepare to negotiate and those they are prepared only to consult. Also appear to have provide the basis for HRM (comment interest, culture and values ideology within organization,

Pluralist perspective
y Assumptions

Post-Capitalist society, where a relatively widespread distribution of power and authority within the society, a separation of ownership from mgt. a separation ,acceptance and institutionalization of political and industrial conflict  Coalescence of sectional groups within work organisation  Differing values, interests and objectives  Competitive authority/loyalty structures (formal & informal) y Nature of conflict and its resolution  Rational and inevitable  Structural and institutionalized  Compromise, negotiate and agreement y Role of Trade Unions  Legitimate and accepted in both economic and managerial relations  Internal and integral to organization


Conflict result from industrial and organizational factors. 1. Different roles of mgt. and employees y Mgrs responsible for efficiency, productivity and profitability y Employees: more of personal term (better pay ,good working conditions and good job security.

2. Conflictual behavior result form: y Specific situation (e.g the closure of some part of organization and change to new technology) y general management principal (to cut cost, increase profit and productivity)

According to Fox mutual independent of sectional groups exist only in the common interest in the survival as a whole. Pluralist also assume sometime normative divergencies between the parties are not so fundamental or so wide to be unbridgeable. Where each group prepared to limit its claim and aspiration. Resolution of the conflict is characterized by the need to establish accepted institution and procedures which achieve collaboration, through comprehensive, codified systems of negotiated regulations.

THE NATURE OF IR

Unitary: Human resource management


Management or manipulation?
y Focus


Strategic & integrated managerial approach to the management of people HRM support for achieving business aims and objectives Individualism (human relations, organisational psychology) Integrating planning, monitoring and control of human resources (not just employees) Securing employee commitment or organisations aims & objectives (performance based rewards, employee involvement)

y Mechanisms
 

Unitary: Human resource management


y Antara ciri-ciri HRM (Amstrong)  Pekerja perlu diurus, secekap dan seketat mungkin, seperti juga sumber-sumber lain supaya dapat memaksima nilai tambah.  Perlu ada satu sistem, bantu-membantu dalam bentuk komunikasi - contoh: team briefing, dll.  Penggunaan teknik penglibatan pekerja contoh: QCC  Memberi penekanan terus terhadap qualiti contoh: TQM  Flexible dalam penyusunan kerja - kos efektif dalam penggunaan buruh.  Penekanan terhadap temawork.  Strategi latihan: Pekerja diberi latihan dalaman sendiri untuk menyesuaikan dengan teknoligi yang digunakan, daripada mengambil pekerja yang telah ada skill. Ini meningkatkan pengantungan pekerja pada majikan dengan cara mengasingkan mereka mengikut pekerjaan.

Unitary: Human resource management


Berbagai contoh yang dapat kita lihat bagaimana pihak pengurusan boleh menggunakan berbagai kaedah untuk mengekploitasikan dan menurunkan tahap keupayaan buruh. Antara nya; y Buruh, buruh hanya mahir dalam sebahagian dari proses kerja tertentu contoh: hanya line tertentu. y Flexible company, ada pekerja tetap - untuk jangkamasa panjang. Pekerja kontrak sementara - ikut keperluan syarikat. Dengan membahagi kan buruk kepada dua kategori berlakunya proses divide and rule. y Responsible autonomy: Satu kaedah pengurusan saintifik, di mana pekerja diberi sedikit hak untuk mengawal kerja mereka sendiri, tetapi ianya dalam bidang yang pengurusan lihat dapat capai objektif organisasi dan dapat meningkat keberkesanan organisasi - majikan lebih untung. y Personal Control : dimana orang yang diatas bertanggung jawab terhadap kerja dan aktibiti orang bawahan. y Bureaucratic control: berasaskan polisi , peraturan dan undangundang di tempat kerja

Pluralist: Input-output model


Input Conversion Output

CONFLICT
Function: Identify Differences of interest Types: 1. Micro-level organisation tensions 2. Macro-level society values & issues Forms of expression: 1. Hidden individual 2. Overt constitutional 3. Industrial pressure

RECONCILIATION
Conducted through: 1. Processes 2. Institutions 3. Levels

REGULATION
Rules: 1. Substantive or procedural 2. Internal or external to the organisation 3. Varying degrees of formality

Marxist: Control of the labour process


B.M Mesin, Alatan dan Buruh
y B.M

B.B.G CAPITALS

BARANG PASARAN

= Barang Mentah y B.B.G = Barang Boleh Guna

Marxist ( Control of labour process)


Proses Kawalan Buruh ( Control of labour process) y Thomson mendefinasikan proses buruh labour process sebagai satu cara dimana bahan y mentah ditukar oleh buruh dengan menggunakan alatalatan atau mesin, pertama kepada y barang-barang untuk digunakan dan kemudian di bawah sistem kapitalis ianya ditukar y kepada barangan yang boleh ditukar didalam pasaran.

y Thomson - Asas Theory ini ialah: y 1.

Social Relation yang wujud antara pekerja dimana ianya akan menghasilkan keupayaan (kekuatan) dan kapasiti ini diambil oleh kapitalis sebagai satu jalan (cara) untuk mengeluarkan barangan yang bernilai, dan tidak secara langsung buruh juga dianggap sebagai barangan (komoditi).

Marxist: Control of the labour process


y Focus


The way capital controls labour Scientific management or deskilling Segmentation of labour (core & periphery) Bureaucratic control (policies, procedures & rules) Responsible autonomy (self-control or adoption of management values as integral part of job?) Resistance (restrictive practices) Collectivism (joint regulation)

y Mechanisms of management control


   

y Employee response
 

System Approach
Originated by Dunlop, being subjected to a variety of interpretation, uses and criticism. However they do not invalidate the systems approach but they suggested accommodation and Refinement. It is a broad based integrative model that sought to provide tools of analysis to interpret and gain understanding the widest possible range of IR facts and practices and to explain why particular rules are establish in particular IR systems and how and why they change in response to changes affecting the system. This model sees IR as a subsystem of society distinct from but overlapping, the economic and political subsystem

System Approach
Four interrelated elements: Actors- management, non-managerial employees and their representatives And specialize government agencies concern with IR. Context : influence and constraints on the decisions of the actors which emanate from other parts of society, such as technology, market, budgetary and the locus of power in the society.. Ideology; beliefs within the system which not only define the role of each Actor or groups of actors but also define the view that they have of the role of other actors in the system. If the view compatible-stable IR system and other wise. Rules; the regulatory framework, developed by a range of process and presented in variety of forms which expresses the terms and nature of the employment relationship.

System of industrial relations - 1


y Dunlop - Actors, working within contexts

(environment), developing a body of rules, held together by an ideology


y System producing rules (IRS) and system

governed by rules (production)


y Naturally stable and orderly? y Emphasis on roles rather than people y Importance of environmental influences

System of industrial relations - 2


Industrial relations system (2) Environments Economic structure Political Legal Government and State Agencies Roles Attitudes Values Interests Other levels of the industrial relations system Environments

Social Cultural Organisational hierarchy of management Power Choice Attitudes Values Interests

Organisational hierarchy of management Attitudes Values Interests Power Choice Output (substantive rules) Roles

Power Choice Industrial relations system (1) Rule-making process Internal rules Input (conflict) Power Disorder Productive system Market Environments Technology

Roles

Control/ order

WIDER APPROACH TO IR

Comparative approach
y Difference between:
 

Comparative (analysing different countries) International (transnational institutions and phenomena) Inform public policy debate Changing world economy Development of fair international employment standards Lack of common terminology and definitions Differences between stated institutional framework and reality of actual practice Problems of transferability

y Importance of comparative approach


  

y Problems of comparison
 

Convergence
y Logic of industrialisation

All countries subject to same economic, technological and market forces  All need concentrated, disciplined workforce with new and changing skills  Similar government role in providing economic and social infrastructure for industrialisation (competing for same international investment) y Modified convergence  Countries at different stages of industrialisation  Alternative solutions to common problems  Regional based convergence


Divergence
y y

Distinctive value systems and cultural features Heterogeneity within national industrial relations systems (decentralisation & flexibility) Different strategic choices by Government, employers and unions at macro (society) and micro (organisation) levels on nature, content and process of employment relationship Political-economic framework of newer industrialised countries versus pluralistic framework of older industrialised countries

You might also like