posted on 2017-03-23, 14:26authored byJ Ryan Lamare, Patrick Gunnigle, Paul Marginson, Gregor Murray
The relationships among employee representation, formal union status,
and employer strategies within and across institutional regimes
offer a variegated landscape in the context of globalization. Key questions
remain as to the relative weight of macro- and micro-level influences
on union status at subsidiaries of multinational companies
(MNCs). This study analyzes data gathered through coordinated surveys
of MNC subsidiaries in Canada, Ireland, and the United Kingdom,
and tests the extent to which union status and double-breasting
depend on home-country variation, host-country influences, and
particular organizational characteristics. The authors find support for
a combination of effects on both union status and double-breasting.
Further analyses test explicit variations on union status within each
host context and support arguments that effects depend on the particularities
of national industrial relations regimes.
History
Publication
Industrial and Labor Relations Review;66 (3), pp. 696-722