Careers CAR

 View Only
  • 1.  New Journal for 2015: Work, Aging and Retirement

    Posted 07-17-2014 20:52

    Editor: by Mo Wang

    Work, Aging and Retirement provides a peer-reviewed forum for evidence-based, translational research on worker aging and retirement, with the goal of enhancing understanding of these phenomena.  Manuscripts may be submitted via the journal's online submission portal at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/workar

    Work, Aging and Retirement reflects a broad community of professionals in the fields of psychology, sociology, economics, gerontology, business and management, and industrial labor relations. It aims to publish high-quality research that is of interest to public policy makers, organizational decision makers, human resource professionals, and older worker advocates for the policy implications of these papers. Work, Aging and Retirement encourages an international perspective, publishing research and findings from various countries, regions, and entities that are governed by different socio-economic policies.

    Work, Aging and Retirement primarily considers empirical and theoretical investigations that enhance understanding of phenomena related to worker aging and retirement. These phenomena can be (1) at one or multiple levels-individuals, groups, organizations, regions or countries, and societies or cultures; (2) in work settings such as business, education, training, health, service, government, or military institutions; or (3) in the public or private sector, for-profit or nonprofit.

    A non-exhaustive sampling of specific topic areas appropriate for the journal includes:

    • Age discrimination at workplace;
    • Age-related diversity issues at workplace;
    • Aging and creativity, innovation, and adaptation;
    • Aging and expertise and knowledge management;
    • Aging and positive and negative work behaviors;
    • Aging and the use of technology and work systems;
    • Aging and training, learning, and skill acquisition;
    • Aging and work stress, health, and well-being;
    • Aging and work–family interface;
    • Attitudes toward retirement;
    • Early retirement;
    • Employment after retirement;
    • Gender roles in retirement;
    • Health and financial well-being in retirement;
    • Leisure activities in retirement;
    • Mid and late career issues;
    • Older workers' abilities, personality, and other characteristics;
    • Older workers' job attitudes, affect, and emotions;
    • Older workers' work motivation;
    • Performance measurement and management for older workers;
    • Retirement adjustment;
    • Retirement and family life;
    • Retirement decision making;
    • Retirement planning;
    • Retirement-related human resource practices;
    • Social security, pension systems, and retirement savings;
    • Testing and personnel selection for older workers;
    • The demography of aging and retirement;
    • Work design for older workers;
    • Workforce planning.

    Work, Aging and Retirement publishes three types of articles.

    Empirical Articles: The journal publishes empirical articles that report (1) theoretically driven and rigorously conducted empirical investigations that extend conceptual understanding of worker aging and retirement-related phenomena (original investigations or meta-analyses), (2) descriptive research on phenomena where we lack basic knowledge which will provide a foundation for building new knowledge and theory (such studies should provide novel data on important and unknown phenomena), (3) rigorously conducted qualitative research on phenomena that are difficult to capture with quantitative methods, or (4) replications of previously published empirical studies to offer confirmative or rebuttal evidence. For authors who intend a replication study, please contact the Editor first to gauge interest.

    Methodological Articles: The journal publishes methodological articles devoted to the development and dissemination of innovative methods for collecting, analyzing, understanding, and interpreting data related to worker aging and retirement.

    Review Articles: The journal welcomes and commissions review articles that either (1) synthesize literature and create new theories of worker aging and retirement-related phenomena that will stimulate novel research, or (2) offer an extensive literature review on a specific topic to summarize the state of knowledge and critically assess the gaps and important issues in past research, thereby directing future research.

     



  • 2.  CFP: Employee Share Option Programs and Employee-Owned Companies in Central and Eastern Europe

    Posted 07-22-2014 09:35
    * Apologies for cross-postings*
    Please could circulate this call for papers.
    Many thanks.
    Anna Soulsby
    Nottingham University Business School
    ........................................................................................................
     
     

    Organizacija

     

    Call for Papers: Employee Share Option Programs and Employee-Owned Companies in Central and Eastern Europe

     

    Deadline for Submission of Abstracts: December 15, 2014

     

    The academic literature on employee share option programs (ESOP) and employee-owned companies (EOC) in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) is characterized by at least two omissions. First, there is a remarkable silence about the relationship between EOC and ESOPs in CEE countries-with some exceptions that prove the rule (Mygind 2012)-though ESOP has been widely used as an instrument of mass privatization in several CEE countries and has led to majority employee share ownership (ESO) in a large number of firms (Aghion & Blanchard 1998). This neglect reminds us of the fact that despite close topical, theoretical, and empirical associations, the phenomena of EOC and ESOP have scarcely been discussed together in the academic discourse at all (Dow 2003). Ironically, while the EOC literature stresses some rather negative aspects of the specific employee ownership form, such as the degenerative tendencies and a principally limited viability of EOCs, the ESOP literature mainly propagates the positive aspects of ESO, such as the positive effects on identification with the firm or productivity gains.

    Second, the academic discussion on the role of ESOPs and EOCs in the transformation process in CEE countries is rather disconnected from the long standing discourse about the potentially emancipatory role of ESOPs and EOCs in the Western world (Backhaus 1979). Moreover, there are hardly any references to the previously prominent debate about 'labor-managed-firms` in either 'labor-managed' or 'mixed' economies, which had had a very strong theoretical basis in terms of the "Illyrian Firm" (Ward 1958; Vanek 1970; Meade 1972) or the "pure rental firm" (Jensen & Meckling 1979) despite reflecting "some degree of ideological commitment" (Hansmann 1996: 7) during the Cold War. Moreover, the implications of the rather sharp and fast decline of ESO and EOCs in the CEE countries following privatization have not yet been systematically reflected in the Western literature (Kalmi 2003).

    Thus, our current understanding of ESOPs and EOCs in CEE is not only limited by the lack of coherent empirical data, but also by the lack of a connection to the strong theoretical tradition, and by the lack of studies that compare the experiences made in CEE with the experiences made in Western countries. However, if one is interested in developing and experimenting with some alternative forms of organizing, with different forms of material and immaterial employee participation, and with democratic governance structures, the experiences with ESOPs and EOCs in the CEE countries can be analyzed more rigorously, thereby connecting them more strongly with the Western discourse and tradition.

    Against this background, Organizacija aims to publish a Special Issue on ESOP and EOC in CEE. The aims of this Special Issue are (a) to advance our knowledge on the structures and processes at the individual, organizational, and societal levels that are germane to participatory types of organization; (b) to draw lessons from the CEE experiences for the western regions; and (c) to learn about the behavior of participatory types of organization and of individuals in such organizations in different institutional settings. For this purpose, we are looking for theoretical and empirical contributions from economics, history, industrial relations, management studies, political science, and sociology, amongst others.

    We welcome both theory-based empirical studies grounded in any methodological tradition (qualitative as well as quantitative), and conceptual contributions that focus on micro, meso or macro levels of analysis. Moreover, we encourage both studies that extend current theories and those questioning or even disconfirming taken-for-granted beliefs about participatory types of organization on theoretical or empirical grounds. Papers may include, but are not limited to, the following topics:

     

    - The influence of public discourse about EOCs and matters pertaining to the political legitimacy of privatization on the emergence and development of EOCs

    - Traces of the Illyrian Firm or pure rental firm in a setting of free markets, private ownership, and political democracy

    - Specific country studies and comparative studies on institutional conditions for EOCs in CEE countries and their outcomes with respect to the viability of EOC

    - The influence of specific contexts of corporate governance in CEE countries on the ownership and control of EOCs

    - The influence of industrial relations in the CEE context on the viability of EOCs in CEE and the influence of EOCs on industrial relations practices

    - Efficiency and effectiveness of EOCs in CEE

    - The influence of different (countries') experiences with worker's self-management on the viability of EOCs after privatization

    - Comparative case-studies about the emergence of EOC during privatization and their development depending on institutional context, participatory

    culture, experiences with worker's self-management and individual ownership rights

    - Transfer of EOC & ESOP models from West to East and vice versa; adaptation of models and learning barriers between East and West

    - Comparative studies about EOC as a privatization instrument in East and West

    - History, development, distribution, and outcomes of ESOP in CEE

    - The impact of ESOP on the viability of EOCs in CEE

     

    Procedures

     

    The following deadlines have to be observed:

    - 15th December 2014: Submission of abstracts (maximum 1000 words) to the guest editors (thomas.steger@ur.de or olaf.kranz@wiwi.uni-regensburg.de)

    - 31st January 2015: Invitations to submit full papers sent out

    - 31st May 2015: Submission of full papers (according to the journal's guidelines http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/orga, maximum 8000 words)

    - 30th September 2015: Feedback to authors

    - 31st December 2015: Submission of full papers with revisions

    - 2016: Journal volume to be published

     

    Any further questions may be addressed to the guest editors:

    Thomas Steger / Olaf Kranz

    Department of Leadership and Organization

    University of Regensburg

    Germany.

     

    References

    Aghion, P. & Blanchard, O.J. (1998) On privatization methods in Eastern Europe and their implications. Economics of Transition, 6, 87-99.

    Backhaus, J. (1979) Ökonomik der partizipativen Unternehmung. Vol. I. Tübingen: Mohr/Siebeck.

    Dow, G.K. (2003) Governing the firm. Worker's control in theory and practice. Cambridge: CUP.

    Hansmann, H. (1996) The ownership of enterprise. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

    Jensen, M.C. & Meckling, W.H. (1979) Rights and production functions: An application to labor-managed firms and codetermination. Journal of Business, 52, 469-506.

    Kalmi, P. (2003) The rise and fall of employee ownership in Estonia, 1987-2001. Europe-Asia Studies, 55, 1213-1239.

    Meade, J. (1972) The theory of labour-managed firms and of profit sharing. Economic Journal, 82, 402-428.

    Mygind, N. (2012) Trends in employee ownership in Eastern Europe. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 23, 1611-1642.

    Vanek, J. (1970) The general theory of labor-managed market economies. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

    Ward, B. (1958) The firm in Illyria: Market syndicalism. American Economic Review, 48, 566-589.


    This message and any attachment are intended solely for the addressee and may contain confidential information. If you have received this message in error, please send it back to me, and immediately delete it.   Please do not use, copy or disclose the information contained in this message or in any attachment.  Any views or opinions expressed by the author of this email do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nottingham.

    This message has been checked for viruses but the contents of an attachment may still contain software viruses which could damage your computer system, you are advised to perform your own checks. Email communications with the University of Nottingham may be monitored as permitted by UK legislation.