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Empowerment And Innovation: Managers, Principles And Reflective Practice

Author Martin Beirne
Publisher Edward Elgar Pub
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99.00 110.00 USD
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Book Details
Author(s)Martin Beirne
ISBN / ASIN1843762463
ISBN-139781843762461
AvailabilityUsually ships in 1 to 3 weeks
Sales Rank9,980,779
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

'This well-written book presents a mature, wide-ranging and sophisticated account of empowerment, married to an incisive examination of major developments and shortcomings of attempts to empower employees or for employees to empower themselves. Indeed, by engaging with self-empowering initiatives beyond the workplace Beirne successfully extends the narrative to shine a light on the often-obscured potential of working people to engineer positive change in their lives. The lessons for managers and politicians, who along with students of employment relations, would benefit from reading this book, are clear but hardly likely to reassure those for whom empowerment is simply a motivational balm to be used to smooth and soften the exploitation found within employment relationships.'
- Jeff Hyman, University of Aberdeen, UK

Employee empowerment is one of the most widely touted and potentially potent concepts in modern management. It raises fundamental questions about the nature and scope of management and organization, and about the respective roles and responsibilities of front line practitioners. The terms for a viable collaboration between employers, managers and employees also come under scrutiny.

Calling upon a wealth of research material, this book relates the various debates behind employee empowerment to a broad range of practical scenarios, charting opportunities as well as constraints and drawing insights from a rich combination of settings and sources across industry, commerce and the public sector.

Connecting theory to practice, and adopting a polemical as well as an analytical position, the book speaks directly to researchers and policymakers, and especially to current and aspiring managers, who favor a fresh approach to work and employee relations. It will appeal to those who regard empowerment as a progressive rather than a casual reference point for managerial activity.