Citation
(2014), "2013 Awards for Excellence", Employee Relations, Vol. 36 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2014-001
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2013 Awards for Excellence
Article Type: Award for Excellence From: Employee Relations, Volume 36, Issue 1.
The following article was selected for this year's Outstanding Paper Award for Employee Relations
"Civil society organizations and the exercise of power in the employment relationship"
Brian Abbott, Edmund Heery and Stephen Williams
Abstract
Purpose This paper seeks to focus on civil society organizations (CSOs) and their capacity to exercise power in the employment
relationship. In particular, the paper is concerned with identifying the sources of power, how it is exercised and whether
CSOs can exert pressure on other employment actors despite their apparent lack of resources possessed by more established
representative structures.
Design/methodology/approach Findings are based on 139 completed postal questionnaires and 47 interviews, primarily face-to-face, across 34 different CSOs.
Findings Adopting a resource dependence framework suggests that CSOs have the capacity to exercise power and influence key employment actors. However, the power of CSOs is undermined by the absence of an internal organizational presence, making it difficult
to mobilize workers.
Research limitations/implications The research highlights the role of an often-ignored employment actor. To provide further insights further research is needed to garner the views of other employment participants.
Originality/value In employee relations discussions of workplace power have typically focused on the power of the state, employers and trade unions. This paper adopts a novel angle by exploring the role of CSOs and their ability to exercise power.
This article originally appeared in Volume 34 Number 1, 2012, Employee Relations
The following articles were selected for this year's Highly Commended Award
"Engineering compliance and worker resistance in UK further education: the creation of the Stepford lecturer"
Kim Mather, Les Worrall and Graeme Mather
This article originally appeared in Volume 34 Number 5, 2012, Employee Relations
"Sociological factors influencing the practice of incident reporting: the case of the shipping industry"
Syamantak Bhattacharya
This article originally appeared in Volume 34 Number 1, 2012, Employee Relations
"Every man for himself": teamwork and customer service in the hospitality industry
James Richards, Shiona Chillas and Abigail Marks
This article originally appeared in Volume 34 Number 3, 2012, Employee Relations