Publications
We author and publish a range of resources to keep you up to date with the latest developments in employment, labour market and human resource policy and practice.
All our pdf publications are free to access.
Search results
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Workplace Health Connect: January 2007 Progress Report
Tyers C with Gifford J, Gordon-Dseagu V, Lucy D, Usher T, Wilson S | Feb 2007 | Health and Safety ExecutiveWorkplace Health Connect (WHC) was a confidential service designed to give free, practical advice on workplace health, safety and return to work issues, to smaller businesses (with 5 to 250 workers) in England and Wales. This progress report was commissioned by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) to evaluate the first eight months of the service. This publication is no longer available.
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The Impact of the National Minimum Wage
Pay Differentials and Workplace Change
Denvir A, Loukas G | Feb 2007 | Low Pay CommissionThis report investigates the ways in which firms have made organisational changes, including changes to systems of incentives and rewards, in response to any compression of pay differentials following the 2005 uprating of the National Minimum Wage (NMW).
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Adapting assessment and development to the changing nature of work
Vic Hartley | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesThis paper highlights the inadequacies of traditional approaches and points to new procedures that meet today's needs, in this important aspect of talent management. It also provides an example of where the proposed new approach has produced startling results which have provided high-quality assessment data at a fraction of the cost of traditional approaches.
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Several routes to an HR nirvana: but is it all a mirage?
Peter Reilly | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesThis paper examines the main routes towards HR reform, pointing out potential pitfalls and how to avoid them. The paper examines the different routes towards HR transformation: structural reform; outsourcing; process modernisation; and technological innovation.
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Is HRM evidence-based and does it matter?
Rob Briner | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesFrom fortune-tellers to football managers and from homeopaths to home secretaries, all practitioners tend to believe quite strongly that what they do is based on evidence. This paper explores these issues in order to make the case that while HR has made great progress in starting to engage with evidence it still has some way to go, as a profession and practice, before it can truly claim to be evidence-based.
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The Role of Loan Commitments in Credit Allocation on the UK Small Firms Loan Guarantee Scheme
Cowling M | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesIn this paper we provide empirical evidence concerning the nature of loan commitment contracts and the extent to which individual loan parameters interact with each other. Specifically, we consider how the quantitative allocation of credit, the loan amount, is affected or altered by changes to other components of the total loan package. By doing so we shed some more light on the type of real world trade-offs that credit constrained firms might face when approaching banks for funds, using the UK governments loan guarantee programme.
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Self-employment Dynamics and 'Transitional Labour Markets'
Some more UK evidence
Meager N | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesThis paper looks at some aspects of the potential role of self-employment in transitional labour markets (TLM), building on previous work by the author (Meager and Bates, 2002). The question we were concerned with was whether self-employment transitions operate as positive or negative contributions to labour market dynamics.
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Job Matching in the UK
Determinants and Implications of Underskilling and Overskilling
Cowling M | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesIn this paper we consider job-skills mismatches of those individuals fortunate enough to have jobs and question whether firms are failing to utilise the skills of their existing labour force. Further, we also consider whether firms are hiring workers not capable of fulfilling their job requirements without adequate training provision.
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ICT Strategy, Disabled People and Employment in the UK
Meager N, Wilson S, Hill D | Feb 2007 | Institute for Employment StudiesThis paper focuses on the application of ICT (Information and Communications Technology) in helping disabled people enter and remain in employment in the UK, and in particular on the nature and extent of any national ICT and/or disability strategies in this area. The paper is based on a review of the limited academic literature and relevant policy documents available in this area, together with semi-structured expert interviews with a small number of key informants in the ICT field, in disability organisations and government.
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Evaluation of the Working Neighbourhoods Pilot - Final report
Dewson S, Casebourne J, Darlow A, Bickerstaffe T, Fletcher D R, Gore T, Krishnan S | Feb 2007 | Department for Work and PensionsThe Working Neighbourhoods Pilot (WNP) was introduced by the Department for Work and Pensions in April 2004 to test a new approach to offering intensive support to help people to gain work. This report presents the findings of the evaluation of the WNP. The evaluation comprised four main elements: a literature review; analysis of secondary and administrative data, undertaken by DWP analysts, to compare trends in benefit flows over time and against 12 selected comparison sites; detailed case study work with stakeholders in each of the pilot sites, and their matched comparison sites; and an eligible residents' survey of 1,200 residents across the 12 pilot sites looking at attitudes and motivations towards employment, and their experiences of employment, unemployment and the pilot.