International Human Resource Management [C252]
Introduction
This course aims to introduce you to the study and practice of International Human Resource Management (IHRM). To benefit from this, you need, of course, to have a basic understanding of Human Resource Management (HRM) itself. HRM has developed from personnel management, but instead of concentrating primarily on the hiring and firing of staff, it is the strategic and coherent approach to the overall management of an organisation’s most valued assets – the people working there who contribute to the objectives of the business. Its main aim is to develop personnel policies that improve employee relations at work. This course will, therefore, begin with an examination of the history and nature of Human Resource Management, before embedding it in its international context.
Aims & Objectives
When you have completed this course, you should able to analyse the use of Human Resource Management principles in your own organisation, and perhaps introduce them; in addition you will be able to:
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identify and discuss the main tasks associated with HRM
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assess the main perspectives on management and explain their relationship to HRM
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explain the importance of the cultural context for HRM
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discuss the challenges that multi-national corporations face in managing HR in some major economies
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evaluate the importance of parent–subsidiary relationships in relation to HRM
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assess the extent to which multi-national corporations have the freedom to impose common approaches to HRM in their international operations
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embed organisational learning and knowledge within the strategic IHRM function
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discuss the challenges of managing culture within an international joint venture
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examine expatriation from the perspectives of both the parent company and the overseas subsidiary/partner
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summarise IHRM and its implications for HR practice
Resources
Students receive a looseleaf binder containing eight ‘course units’; these texts are carefully structured to provide the main teaching and are equivalent to traditional course lectures, defining and exploring the main concepts and issues, locating these within current debate and introducing and linking the further assigned readings. Two assignments (to be marked by your CeFiMS tutors), and a specimen examination paper are also included within the student pack, along with the following:
Text Book
The course textbook, which is
provided for you, is Monir Tayeb
(2005) International Human
Resource Management, Oxford,
UK: Oxford University Press
This is a widely used and
comprehensive account of the key
issues facing multi-national
corporations in their management
of human resources. It also
summarises the main debates in
HRM, and examines HRM policies
and practices in several major
economies, with a number of
illustrative case stud-ies based
on original research.
Course Reader
The Course Reader is a collection of journal articles, case studies and book extracts that are of particular relevance and interest to the topics covered in the course. The study guide provides guidance on how to use the course reader.
Course Timetable
This shows the linkage between the various components of the course and indicates the schedule for reading the texts, submitting assignments, etc.
Course Content
Unit 1: Study of International Human Resource Management
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1.1 An Introduction to Human Resource Management
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1.2 The Tasks of Human Resource Management
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1.3 The Main Debates in Human Resource Management
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1.4 Conclusions and Summary
Unit 2 The National Context of Human Resource Management
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2.1 The Importance of Context
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2.2 Seven Cultures of Capitalism
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2.3 Convergence and Divergence? The Role of Culture
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2.4 HRM and National Culture
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2.5 The Institutional Context of HRM
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2.6 Other contextual factors
Unit 3: The National Context of Human Resource Management – Case Studies
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3.1 The Importance of National Context
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3.2 Implications
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3.3 Conclusion
Unit 4 Managing HR Across the World
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4.1 Introduction
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4.2 Going International
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4.3 Parent–Subsidiary Relationship
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4.4 Subsidiary Perspective
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4.5 Conclusion
Unit 5: Differentiation and Integration
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5.1 Introduction
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5.2 Differentiation and Integration
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5.3 Mechanisms to Achieve Integration
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5.4 Conclusion
Unit 6: Knowledge Transfer within a Multi-National Company
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6.1 Introduction
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6.2 Organisational Knowledge and its Significance
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6.3 HRM and Organisational Knowledge
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6.4 Transfer of Knowledge Between and Within Organisations
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6.5 Transfer of Knowledge within MNCs
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6.6 Transfer of Managerial Know-how and HRM across National Borders
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6.7 Conclusion
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Appendix
Unit 7: HRM in International Joint Ventures
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7.1 Introduction
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7.2 Joint Ventures and National Culture
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7.3 Organisational Culture and IJVs
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7.4 HRM in Joint Ventures
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7.5 Conclusion
Unit 8: Foreign Assignments – Conclusion to the Course
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8.1 Rationales for Foreign Assignments
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8.2 The Cost of Expatriation
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8.3 Preparation for Foreign Assignment
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8.4 Managing Expatriates
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8.5 Conclusion to Unit 8
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8.6 Summarising International Human Resource Management
Tuition & Assessment
You will complete two
Assignments which will be marked
by your tutor. Assignments are
each worth 15% of your total
mark. You will be expected to
submit your first assignment by
the Tuesday of Week 5, and the
second assignment at the end of
the course, on the Tuesday after
Week 8. Assignments are
submitted and feedback given
online. In addition, queries and
problems can be answered through
the Online Study Centre.
You will also sit a three-hour
examination on a specified date
in October, worth 70% of your
total mark. An up-to-date
timetable of examinations is
published on the website in
April each year.
Course Sample
Click on the link below to download the course sample document in PDF.
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