Power, Innovation and Problem-Solving: The Personnel Managers’ Three Steps to Heaven?
Article first published online: 16 APR 2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6486.2004.00438.x
Issue
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Journal of Management Studies
Special Issue: Controversies and Continuities in Management Studies: Essays in Honour of Karen Legge
Volume 41, Issue 3, pages 401–423, May 2004
Additional Information
How to Cite
Guest, D. and King, Z. (2004), Power, Innovation and Problem-Solving: The Personnel Managers’ Three Steps to Heaven?. Journal of Management Studies, 41: 401–423. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-6486.2004.00438.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 16 APR 2004
- Article first published online: 16 APR 2004
- Abstract
- Article
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ABSTRACT Legge's seminal book on personnel managers (Legge, 1978) identified ambiguities in their role, vicious circles that limited their power and possible strategies to improve their effectiveness. This paper explores how far the advent of human resource management has altered the circumstances in which they find themselves and how far it offers a new basis for power and influence. Analysis of interviews with 48 senior executives indicates that although there have been changes in features of the ambiguities and vicious circles, personnel managers have failed to overcome many of the problems identified by Legge 25 years earlier or to seize the opportunities outlined by Ulrich (1997) to become human resource champions.

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