International Human Resource Management
3 contributors - Paperback
£57.99
Mustafa Özbilgin is Professor of Organisational Behaviour and Human Resource Management at Brunel Business School, Brunel University, London. Drawing on his research on equality, diversity and inclusion at work from comparative and relational perspectives, he has published more than 10 books and a large number of papers in journals such as Academy of Management Review, Academy of Management Learning and Education, British Journal of Management, Human Resource Management (US), Journal of Vocational Behavior, International Journal of Human Resource Management, Human Relations and Gender Work and Organization among others. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the British Journal of Management (2010 to date) and he serves as an Associate Editor for Gender Work and Organization. He sits on the Editorial Advisory Boards of the Academy of Management Learning and Education (AMLE), Journal of Managerial Psychology and Equality, and Diversity and Inclusion among others. Having worked at University of Hertfordshire, University of Surrey, Queen Mary, University of London and University of East Anglia over the last twelve years, Professor Özbilgin has held visiting posts at Cornell University (USA), CEPS-Instead (Luxembourg), and the Japan Institute of Labour Policy and Training (Japan). He currently holds visiting professorships at the University of Paris (Pantheon-Assass) and Dauphine University in France and St Gallen University in Switzerland. Dimitria Groutsis is a Senior Lecturer in Work and Organisational Studies, University of Sydney. Dimitria has conducted research on labour mobility and the related policy implications of this mobility in Australia and Europe. Her main focus has been on skilled migration with an emphasis on the medical profession. She is currently a member of an international team examining the mobility of health care professionals in Australia, Canada, the US and the UK. In 2006 she was awarded a visiting fellowship at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy where she conducted research on skilled migration into Greece. During this time she also continued her work with the International Organisation of Migration (IOM) on preserving a large historical archive depicting the history of post-war Greek emigration. Presently, her research draws on an historical perspective of migration to understand labour settlement needs and management responses to diversity. Dr William Harvey is a Senior Lecturer in Organisation Studies at the University of Exeter. Will Harvey's research focuses on three particular areas. First, on how reputation is built and sustained within professional service firms. In particular, he is analysing how stakeholders judge quality and reputation within management consultancy firms as well as whether such firms have single or multiple reputations across different practice areas in various country contexts. Second, his work analyses the mobility, economic impact and social networks of highly skilled migrants. Specifically, he is focusing on British and Indian professionals working in a range of economic sectors around Boston and Vancouver. Finally, his research examines some of the methodological and practical challenges with interviewing elite business professionals. Will has published in a range of journals across the social sciences including Work and Occupations, Population, Space and Place, Qualitative Research, Global Networks, Asian Population Studies and Geoforum. He is an Associate Fellow in the Centre for Corporate Reputation at the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford.