4.3 Article

Rethinking the employment relationship: a neo-pluralist critique of British industrial relations orthodoxy

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Volume 25, Issue 18, Pages 2608-2625

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09585192.2012.667429

Keywords

employment relationship; history; industrial relations; pluralist; radical; sociology

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Radical pluralism, the mainstream perspective for British and European industrial relations, centres on a Marxian, sociological conception of the employment relationship, which structures explanations of power and conflict. This theoretical critique stresses the historical specificity of the experience of work and the explanatory limitations of the employment relationship. The intellectual history of radical pluralism is traced from Fox ((1974), Beyond Contract: Work, Power and Trust Relations, London: Faber) to Edwards ((1995, 2003), 'The Employment Relationship,' in Industrial Relations, ed. P. Edwards, Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 1-36) and Blyton and Turnbull ((1994, 1998, 2004), The Dynamics of Employee Relations, Basingstoke: Macmillan). Five objections to the radical-pluralist employment relationship are outlined and an alternative, neo-pluralist sociological and historical perspective is sketched.

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