posted on 2020-03-11, 09:06authored byEugene Hickland, Niall Cullinane, Tony Dobbins, Tony Dundon, Jimmy Donaghey
This article, drawing on the latest insights into organisational
silence, considers how employers seek to withhold information
and circumvent meaningful workplace voice when confronted
with regulatory requirements. It offers novel theoretical
insights by redefining employer silencing as characterised by
the withholding of information and the restriction of workplace
dialogue. In outlining three principal routes of non-compliance—
avoidance, suppression, and neglect—we empirically
illustrate the path to silence in the regulatory context of the
European Union Directive establishing a general framework
for informing and consulting employees. Rather than considering
how employers utilised the regulations, as existing research
considers, we look at how employers circumvented the regulatory
space in three case studies in the United Kingdom and
Ireland and the significant role of employer silencing as a tool
for explaining this dynamic.
History
Publication
Human Resource Management Journal; 30 (4), pp. 537-552