Traditional Chinese Thinking on HRM Practices highlights the important
ramifications for both Western and Eastern Human Resources Practices and
is the first research of its kind to empirically investigate the effect
of Chinese core values, which originated from Chinese traditional
thinking, on HRM practices in China. The author of this volume
empirically investigates Chinese Human Resource practices from a
cultural and philosophical perspective, using a qualitative research
strategy. She offers a broader explanation for the peculiarity of
Chinese HRM, whilst complementing the large volume of existing
quantitative studies, which are hypotheses-led and driven by Western
theory. The author tentatively explores the philosophical underpinnings
of Western HRM and compares Western and Eastern ways of thinking
systematically. In doing so, she reveals the current situation and trend
of HRM in China under the influence of Chinese traditional thinking.
This volume will help readers gain a better understanding of the Chinese
style of management and will contribute to the development of management
and organization theories in the Chinese context.