Absence management of migrant agency workers in the food manufacturing sector
Absence management of migrant agency workers in the food manufacturing sector
Temporary workers in low-skilled roles often experience ‘hard’ HRM practices, for example the use of the Bradford Factor to monitor absence, rather than using incentives to reward attendance. However, this peripheral workforce has become increasingly diverse in the UK since the A8 European Union expansion, which has seen over a million migrants from central and eastern Europe register to work in the UK. Importantly, there is also heterogeneity within this group of workers, for example between those who intend to migrate for a short period of time then return, and those who are more settled and wish to develop a career. By considering the particular case of absence management, this paper examines how these different groups of migrants respond to HRM practices. The key contribution of the paper is to examine how different groups of migrants experience these practices, rather than simply comparing migrant and native workers as two homogeneous groups. The paper presents data from the food manufacturing sector in the UK. In total, 88 semi-structured interviews were conducted with operations managers, HR managers, union convenors and workers on permanent, temporary and agency contracts. In addition, data from informal interviews and observation at five companies are presented
1082-1100
Hopkins, Benjamin
2ce94c34-dc58-4f6f-b0fa-092d27f7923b
Dawson, Chris
e4036a26-678c-4891-a1ea-9eb8813bca0b
Veliziotis, Michail
e43806b3-fdb5-494b-a624-04a5227d2fad
Hopkins, Benjamin
2ce94c34-dc58-4f6f-b0fa-092d27f7923b
Dawson, Chris
e4036a26-678c-4891-a1ea-9eb8813bca0b
Veliziotis, Michail
e43806b3-fdb5-494b-a624-04a5227d2fad
Hopkins, Benjamin, Dawson, Chris and Veliziotis, Michail
(2016)
Absence management of migrant agency workers in the food manufacturing sector.
The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 27 (10), .
(doi:10.1080/09585192.2015.1053961).
Abstract
Temporary workers in low-skilled roles often experience ‘hard’ HRM practices, for example the use of the Bradford Factor to monitor absence, rather than using incentives to reward attendance. However, this peripheral workforce has become increasingly diverse in the UK since the A8 European Union expansion, which has seen over a million migrants from central and eastern Europe register to work in the UK. Importantly, there is also heterogeneity within this group of workers, for example between those who intend to migrate for a short period of time then return, and those who are more settled and wish to develop a career. By considering the particular case of absence management, this paper examines how these different groups of migrants respond to HRM practices. The key contribution of the paper is to examine how different groups of migrants experience these practices, rather than simply comparing migrant and native workers as two homogeneous groups. The paper presents data from the food manufacturing sector in the UK. In total, 88 semi-structured interviews were conducted with operations managers, HR managers, union convenors and workers on permanent, temporary and agency contracts. In addition, data from informal interviews and observation at five companies are presented
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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 July 2016
Organisations:
Southampton Business School
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Local EPrints ID: 394249
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394249
ISSN: 0958-5192
PURE UUID: 1062b165-307e-42f8-a574-e5c0492efa78
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Date deposited: 12 May 2016 10:39
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:53
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Author:
Benjamin Hopkins
Author:
Chris Dawson
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