Citation:
Richard Croucher, Paul Gooderham, Emma Parry. The Influences on Direct Communication in British and Danish Firms: Country, ‘Strategic HRM’ or Unionization? . European Journal of Industrial Relations, Volume 12, Number 3 (November 2006), pp. 267-286,
Abstract:
This paper examines the antecedents of private sector managers’ propensity to
communicate directly to employees in Britain and Denmark by use of largescale
survey data. It tests Brewster’s (1995) argument that European HR managers are
constrained in applying American versions of HRM and considers other theories
suggesting that companies in the two countries would have different drivers of
their communications practices. It is also relevant to ‘varieties of capitalism’
discussions of how national systems structure firm-level behaviours. It finds
two antecedents for managers’ propensity to communicate directly, irrespective
of country: whether the senior HR manager is involved in 3 strategy formation
and the degree of unionisation. These are common to companies operating in both
Britain and Denmark and it is therefore concluded that Brewster’s argument must
to that extent