Social dialogue as a sustainable career development practice to combat (meta)stereotyping

Autor: Peters, Pascale, van der Heijden, Beatrice, Spurk, Daniel, de Vos, Ans, Klaassen, Renate, Arenas, A., Di Marco, D., Munduate, L., Euwema, M.
Přispěvatelé: Arenas, A., Di Marco, D., Munduate, L., Euwema, M., Euwema, M.C., RS-Research Line Resilience (part of LIRS program), Department Organisation
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Zdroj: Peters, P, van der Heijden, B, Spurk, D, de Vos, A & Klaassen, R 2017, Social dialogue as a sustainable career development practice to combat (meta)stereotyping . in A Arenas, D Di Marco, L Munduate & M Euwema (eds), Shaping inclusive workplaces through social dialogue . Springer International Publishing AG, Cham, Industrial Relations & Conflict Management, pp. 209-220 . https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66393-7_14
Industrial Relations & Conflict Management, 209-220. Cham, Switzerland : Springer International Publishing AG Switzerland
STARTPAGE=209;ENDPAGE=220;TITLE=Industrial Relations & Conflict Management
Arenas, A.; Di Marco, D.; Munduate, L. (ed.), Shaping inclusive workplaces through social dialogue, pp. 209-220
Shaping inclusive workplaces through social dialogue, 209-220
STARTPAGE=209;ENDPAGE=220;TITLE=Shaping inclusive workplaces through social dialogue
Shaping inclusive workplaces through social dialogue / Arenas, A. [edit.]
Shaping Inclusive Workplaces Through Social Dialogue ISBN: 9783319663920
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-66393-7_14
Popis: Sustainable Human Resource Management (HRM) implies individuals and organizations to share responsibility for workers’ employability, including vulnerable workers, such as older workers (> 50 years). Witnessing the emerging scholarly and societal attention for sustainable career development (SCD), this chapter outlines how the concepts of social dialogue, employability, and (meta)stereotyping may be conceptualized and interrelated, and how they can play a role in HR-processes and, ultimately, affect workers’ career development. The (meta)stereotyping process is illustrated by a short summary of preliminary results from a study of supermarket workers in the Netherlands, particularly focusing on workers engaging in negative age-based (meta)stereotyping. In view of several interrelated trends, older workers (among others) have become an increasingly vulnerable labor market category. The chapter concludes by suggesting organizations to implement HR practices to combat negative (meta)stereotyping in general, and older workers in particular, enabling them to shape more inclusive workplaces, for example, through social dialogue.
Databáze: OpenAIRE