2012
DOI: 10.1080/09585192.2012.655761
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Paternalistic and transactional HRM: the nature and transformation of HRM in contemporary China

Abstract: Drawing on institutionalism and path dependency theory, this paper provides a conceptual framework to identify and explain the nature and transformation of Chinese human resource management (HRM). The framework is applied to case studies of three enterprises that are either state-owned or state-controlled. The paper groups HRM in contemporary China into three categories: Paternalistic; Transactional; and Differentiated with the last one involving a mix of paternalistic and transactional HRM policies and practi… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(61 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…In particular, researchers pointed out that the primary purposes of training in Chinese firms is to arm employees with basic KSAs required by work tasks (Ng & Siu, 2004) and to enhance ideological and political consciousness through moral education (Zhu, Zhang, & Shen, 2012). As a result, employees are likely to obtain general KSAs that are transferrable among firms.…”
Section: The Moderating Role Of Regional Human Capital Levelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, researchers pointed out that the primary purposes of training in Chinese firms is to arm employees with basic KSAs required by work tasks (Ng & Siu, 2004) and to enhance ideological and political consciousness through moral education (Zhu, Zhang, & Shen, 2012). As a result, employees are likely to obtain general KSAs that are transferrable among firms.…”
Section: The Moderating Role Of Regional Human Capital Levelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One could make a similar argument about the paucity of historical contributions (see e.g. Zhu, Zhang, & Shen, 2012 as an exception).…”
Section: Publishing For the Hrm Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chinese workers have been gradually losing the job security they once enjoyed due to changes in labour laws, human resource management practices and firms' competitive environments (Warner and Zhu 2002;Zhu, Zhang, and Shen 2012;Loi et al 2011). These changes in working environment should heighten the impact of workers' perceived security upon organizational performance and worker behaviour.…”
Section: Security and Culturementioning
confidence: 96%