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Article
Publication date: 23 March 2010

Yong Han, Xiaozhi Lu and Zhaozhong Li

Describes an organizational spiritual‐development program run for junior managers at the giant Guangxi State Farm Agriculture Group (SFAG).

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Abstract

Purpose

Describes an organizational spiritual‐development program run for junior managers at the giant Guangxi State Farm Agriculture Group (SFAG).

Design/methodology/approach

Draws on the inside information of the author, who is a course tutor, and some of his trainees.

Findings

Reports how the program can help junior managers to avoid “counterproductive workplace behaviour” and find greater meaning in their work.

Practical implications

Reveals how the course can help to promote: honest, warm and harmonious relationships in the workplace; loyalty to the company and social sanctions against employees who try to undermine their colleagues and sabotage production; participation in the cultural life of the organization; and a more unified enterprise spirit.

Social implications

Details how the tenets of the course chime with the wider objectives of Chinese society.

Originality/value

Contains a particularly interesting section about two volunteers who, having practised counterproductive workplace behaviors the past (one served a prison sentence for it), now lead discussion groups on the program.

Details

Human Resource Management International Digest, vol. 18 no. 2
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0967-0734

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 8 June 2010

Yong Han, Xiaozhuang Zhou and Zhaozhong Li

Explores, from an insider's perspective, the operation of so‐called “humane” resource practices at Guangxi Bank of Industry and Commerce.

Abstract

Purpose

Explores, from an insider's perspective, the operation of so‐called “humane” resource practices at Guangxi Bank of Industry and Commerce.

Design

Concentrates on the operation of three aspects of humane‐resource management at the bank: care for disadvantaged employees; care for the employee's family; and the reduction of status distinctions at work.

Findings

Reports that these policies help to empower and motivate employees at the bank.

Practical implications

Advances the view that managers in China who want to have commitment in the workplace should be prepared to put in the time and effort to provide their employees with humane resource management practices.

Social implications

Reveals that this type of “caring” HR is part of the prevailing ethos in the People's Republic of China.

Originality/value

Provides interesting detail on how HRM operates in the world's largest bank.

Details

Human Resource Management International Digest, vol. 18 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0967-0734

Keywords

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