posted on 2017-03-29, 08:13authored byIan Clark, Philip Almond, Patrick Gunnigle, H. Wachter
This article examines the impact of contemporary business practices within the American business system on established patterns of industrial relations (IR) management in European subsidiaries of US multinationals, specifically how established firm-level settlements for the management of IR may or may not combine with host-country effects to constrain such innovations. The empirical material leads us to evaluate subsidiaries of US multinationals as a contingent factor indicating that institutional effects at the level of the national business system are likely to be more embedded than the effects of ownership on employment and IR at firm level.
History
Publication
Industrial Relations Journal;36 (6), pp. 494-517
Publisher
Wiley and Sons Ltd
Note
peer-reviewed
Rights
This is an early version of a paper subsequently published in the Industrial Relations Journal (full citation below). Please see published paper for definitive bibliography.
Clark, I., Almond, P., Gunnigle, P., & Wachter, H. (2005) “The Americanisation of the European Business System”, Industrial Relations Journal, 36 (6), 494-517