Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to introduce the special issue, which brings together five papers exploring the changing anatomy of HRM at organisational level.
Design/methodology/approach – This overarching paper briefly contextualises the theme and
introduces the five selected empirical papers.
Findings – The findings in this paper vary according to the core theme of each of the five
contributions. The first paper highlights whether the mix of distributed HR activities between the HR department and internal/external agents may be understood to be less a product of contextual
influences and more a matter of corporate choice. The second paper establishes that role dissonance is a very real issue for middle managers with HR responsibilities. The third paper unearths the
complexities and challenges involved in changing existing HRM procedures and practices in a
post-merger scenario. The fourth paper provides an understanding of the management of human
resource supply chains and outlines five, empirically derived, generic models of HR outsourcing. The final paper finds that human resource IT diffusion and take-up is primarily fuelled by interpersonal communication and network interactions among potential adopters.
Originality/value – Combined, the papers offer insights on the changing anatomy of the HRM
function against the backdrop of a dynamic contemporary organisational landscape and showcase
cross-national research on the theme.