Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management

In Today‘s corporate world, Corporate Social Responsibility should be more than the effect of considering the environment. Previous research, for the same, has contributed a gap with no specific bundle of practices for Internal Corporate Social Responsibility which provided an enough space for the r...

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Main Author: Perugu, E.R
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25338/
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author Perugu, E.R
author_facet Perugu, E.R
author_sort Perugu, E.R
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In Today‘s corporate world, Corporate Social Responsibility should be more than the effect of considering the environment. Previous research, for the same, has contributed a gap with no specific bundle of practices for Internal Corporate Social Responsibility which provided an enough space for the research. On the flipside, global Human Resources Management has adopted the best practices which provide mutual benefits for employers and employees. As the mutual benefits are numerous this paper considers employees organizational commitment as one among them. The key findings of this paper includes that training, comparative contingency high pay are positively influences the affective commitment. Other findings include 1) Affective commitment is positively influenced by gender, extensive training and incentives. 2) Continuance commitment is positively influenced by employee security, Extensive training and Incentives but negatively affected by selective hiring. 3) Normative commitment is positively impacted by employee security, training and incentives. 4) Important finding is the bundles of all these practices are positively and perfectly significant with affective commitment. This proves the emotional bondage between the employees and organization. By this evidence I suggest CSR internal practices can adopt these practices
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spelling nottingham-253382018-03-07T21:36:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25338/ Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management Perugu, E.R In Today‘s corporate world, Corporate Social Responsibility should be more than the effect of considering the environment. Previous research, for the same, has contributed a gap with no specific bundle of practices for Internal Corporate Social Responsibility which provided an enough space for the research. On the flipside, global Human Resources Management has adopted the best practices which provide mutual benefits for employers and employees. As the mutual benefits are numerous this paper considers employees organizational commitment as one among them. The key findings of this paper includes that training, comparative contingency high pay are positively influences the affective commitment. Other findings include 1) Affective commitment is positively influenced by gender, extensive training and incentives. 2) Continuance commitment is positively influenced by employee security, Extensive training and Incentives but negatively affected by selective hiring. 3) Normative commitment is positively impacted by employee security, training and incentives. 4) Important finding is the bundles of all these practices are positively and perfectly significant with affective commitment. This proves the emotional bondage between the employees and organization. By this evidence I suggest CSR internal practices can adopt these practices 2011-10-07 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25338/1/final1.pdf Perugu, E.R (2011) Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Perugu, E.R
Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management
title Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management
title_full Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management
title_fullStr Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management
title_full_unstemmed Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management
title_short Corporate Social Responsiblity and Human Resource Management
title_sort corporate social responsiblity and human resource management
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25338/