Personnel Review: Volume 34 Issue 6

A Journal of People, Work, and Organisations

Subject:

Table of contents - Special Issue: Employment relations and public services' “modernisation” under Labour

Guest Editors: Stephen Bach, Ian Kessler, Geoff White

Seeing stars: human resources performance indicators in the National Health Service

Rebecca Kolins Givan

This paper examines the functioning of performance ratings of the human resources (HR) function of National Health Service (NHS). In particular, it looks at the star ratings…

3916

The death of corporatism? Managing change in the fire service

Ian Fitzgerald

To demonstrate how government policy on fires service reform was initially challenged by a stubbornly resistant fire service corporatism but finally dismantled following the 2003…

1774

360° feedback: a critical enquiry

Arthur Morgan, Kath Cannan, Joanne Cullinane

The underpinning assumption in the adoption of 360° feedback is that it heightens an individual's self‐awareness by highlighting differences between how participants see…

13697

UK public sector reform and the “performance agenda” in UK local government: HRM challenges and dilemmas

Lynette Harris

To examine how an external performance review process introduced as part of the public sector modernisation agenda in England and Wales has impacted on HR service provision and…

5985

Role redesign: new ways of working in the NHS

Paula Hyde, Anne McBride, Ruth Young, Kieran Walshe

To examine the introduction of role‐redesign in the NHS and highlight implications for employment relations.

7175

Best value and workplace partnership in local government

Mike Richardson, Stephanie Tailby, Andrew Danford, Paul Stewart, Martin Upchurch

This paper explores employee experiences concerning job security/insecurity, workload, job satisfaction and employee involvement in the aftermath of Best Value reviews in a local…

2224
Cover of Personnel Review

ISSN:

0048-3486

Online date, start – end:

1971

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Open Access:

hybrid

Editors:

  • Professor Eddy Ng
  • Professor Pauline Stanton