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Book

People and Culture in Construction

Book

People and Culture in Construction

DOI link for People and Culture in Construction

People and Culture in Construction book

A Reader

People and Culture in Construction

DOI link for People and Culture in Construction

People and Culture in Construction book

A Reader
Edited ByAndrew Dainty, Stuart Green, Barbara Bagilhole
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2007
eBook Published 31 March 2014
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203640913
Pages 368
eBook ISBN 9780203640913
Subjects Built Environment, Development Studies, Environment, Social Work, Urban Studies
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Dainty, A., Green, S., & Bagilhole, B. (Eds.). (2007). People and Culture in Construction: A Reader (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203640913

ABSTRACT

Construction is one of the largest and most people-intensive industrial sectors. In many countries, however, construction is also one of the most highly criticized in terms of its employment practices and industrial relations. People and culture are too often seen as variables that must be manipulated in the cause of improved productivity.

This important new work provides an essential corrective to the current literature by focusing on people and culture rather than sector efficiency. It presents the latest thinking from a diversity of perspectives derived from a major ESRC seminar series and invited contributions from leading researchers. Its interdisciplinary approach draws together industry and research and is international in its relevance.

Through several multidisciplinary themes, People and Culture in Construction:

  • explores the industry's labour market and the major influences on employment patterns
  • examines how to improve the image and reality of the construction sector as an employer
  • looks at the forces shaping the industry and implications for its stability
  • considers the current composition of the workforce and the potential impacts of workforce diversification
  • analyzes the impact of government targets and policies on construction working practices and culture
  • investigates how to address the skills shortfall currently affecting the industry's performance.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part |2 pages

PART I The construction employment context

chapter 1|23 pages

People and culture in construction: Contexts and challenges

ByANDREW DAINTY, STUART GREEN, BARBARA BAGILHOLE

chapter 2|13 pages

Concrete solutions? Recruitment difficulties and casualisation in the UK construction industry

ByCHRIS FORDE, ROBERT MACKENZIE

chapter 3|17 pages

The nature of the employment relationship in the UK construction industry: A flexible construct?

ByANI RAIDÉN, MICHAEL PYE, JOANNA CULLINANE

chapter 4|14 pages

Self-employment: Legal distinctions and case-law precedents

ByJ . CRAIG BARKER

chapter 5|15 pages

Industrial relations and the management of risk in the construction industry

ByJANET DRUKER

chapter 6|21 pages

Divergent divisions of construction labour: Britain and Germany

Edited ByAndrew Dainty, Stuart Green, Barbara Bagilhole

chapter 7|19 pages

Collaboration on industrial change in construction: On why Scandinavian union approaches are still modern

ByCHRISTIAN KOCH

part |2 pages

PART II Implications for people management practices and culture

chapter 8|17 pages

Warning: Working in construction may be harmful to your psychological well-being!

ByKATHERINE SANG, ANDREW DAINTY, STEPHEN ISON

chapter 9|15 pages

Access and inclusivity of minority ethnic people in the construction industry

ByANDREW CAPLAN

chapter 10|25 pages

The gender gap in architectural practice: Can we afford it?

ByANN DE GRAFT-JOHNSON, SANDRA MANLEY AND CLARA GREED

chapter 11|19 pages

Managing cultural differences in the global construction industry: German and Austrian engineers working in Australia

ByKAROLINA LORENZ, MARTON MAROSSZEKY

part |2 pages

PART III Critical perspectives on construction employment and change

chapter 12|17 pages

The impact of eastward enlargement on construction labour markets in European Union member states

ByDAVID LANGFORD, ANDREW AGAPIOU

chapter 13|18 pages

Developments in construction supply chain management: The impact on people and cultural change

BySIMON A. BURTONSHAW-GUNN AND BOB RITCHIE

chapter 14|18 pages

The impacts of workforce integration on productivity

ByPAUL CHAN, AMMAR KAKA

chapter 15|20 pages

The quest for productivity revisited, or just ‘derecognition by the back door’?

ByNEIL RITSON

chapter 16|22 pages

The culture of the construction industry: Emergence, recognition and nature?

ByPAUL W. FOX

chapter 17|16 pages

Respect for people – The dawn of a new era or mere rhetoric?: An historical analysis of labour relations in construction

BySTEVEN MCCABE
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