ABSTRACT

The nature of human resource development (HRD) has been, and remains, a contested topic – the debate was sparked in part by Monica Lee’s seminal 2001 paper which refused to define the discipline of HRD, but has been accentuated by increasing globalization, political unrest, inequality and the erosion of boundaries. Should HRD now be seen as more than ‘training,’ or a sub-function of large western bureaucracy? This book represents a very wide view of HRD: that it is at the core of our ‘selves’ and our relationships, and that we continually co-create ourselves, our organisations and societies. These ideas are hung upon a model of Holistic Agency, and supported from sources as diverse as evolutionary psychology, science fiction, the challenges of transitional economies, and the structural uncertainties of contemporary society. Examining the tensions between self and other, agency and structure, the book draws inspiration from an almost-autoethnographic approach. This yields a text that is personal, entertaining, and easier to read than many academic tomes – yet considers the depth and development of the human condition, and locates HRD within that.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Section 1 Being, Becoming, and Almost-Autoethnography

chapter 2|15 pages

SECTION 1 2 Defining HRD?

chapter 3|29 pages

3 Evolutionary Roots and Holistic Agency

chapter 4|11 pages

4 Fact, Fiction, and Representation

chapter 5|24 pages

Meaning and Methodological Choice

chapter 6|19 pages

Meet the Author

part |4 pages

Section 2 Aspects of Self

chapter 7|17 pages

The Emergent Self

chapter 8|18 pages

The Future Self

chapter 9|17 pages

The Submerged Self

part |2 pages

Section 3 Aspects of Other

chapter 10|17 pages

Freedom and Choice

chapter 11|13 pages

Decision-Making and Hidden Others

chapter 12|22 pages

Difference and Conflict

part |4 pages

Section 4 Aspects of Agency

chapter 13|28 pages

Who Is the Agent?

chapter 14|35 pages

Agency and Impotence

chapter 15|23 pages

The Isolation of Agency

part |2 pages

Section 5 Aspects of Structure

chapter 16|48 pages

Boundaries and Change

chapter 17|11 pages

The Rules We Create

chapter 18|18 pages

Becoming

chapter 19|4 pages

Conclusions

chapter 20|7 pages

Antecedents