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Subsidiary responses to institutional duality: Collective representation practices of US multinationals in Britain and Germany
109
Citations
40
References
2006
Year
International CooperationCollective Representation PracticesInternational Human Resource ManagementOrganizational CultureMultinational EnterpriseHuman Resource ManagementIndustrial OrganizationOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesCompany PressuresLocal EnvironmentManagementComparative ManagementInstitutional VarietyInternational BusinessGlobal StrategyInstitutional EnvironmentInternational ManagementInternational RelationsInternational Human Resource DevelopmentCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementInstitutional DualityBusinessSubsidiary ResponsesInternational OrganizationSubsidiary ManagementPolitical Science
New institutionalist studies of human resource management in multinational companies argue that subsidiaries are faced with institutional duality-pressures to conform to parent company practices and to the local institutional environment in which they are based. To date, they have concentrated on how subsidiaries respond to parent company pressures. This article considers how subsidiary management responds to both parent company demands and host country pressures in trying to reconcile the challenges of institutional duality. It focuses on how such responses are shaped by the interdependence of subsidiary management with the parent company and the local environment. It does so by comparing case study evidence of collective representation practices in US-owned subsidiaries in Britain and Germany.
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