2007
DOI: 10.1080/10301763.2007.10669364
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Pay Equity Strategies: Notes from New Zealand and New South Wales

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The Partnership Research Centre was axed, along with the Pay and Employment Equity Unit, which since 2004 had overseen a highly effective programme of departmental workplace equity reviews and the incorporation of remediation into human resource planning and practice through capacity-building tools (Hall and Reed 2007). The Nationals adopted a populist version of frontline service/'value for money' rhetoric, capping 'core government administration' at December 2008 staffing levels, and requiring the SSC to move staff to delivery functions (New Zealand Cabinet 2009).…”
Section: The International Journal Of Human Resource Management 2377mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Partnership Research Centre was axed, along with the Pay and Employment Equity Unit, which since 2004 had overseen a highly effective programme of departmental workplace equity reviews and the incorporation of remediation into human resource planning and practice through capacity-building tools (Hall and Reed 2007). The Nationals adopted a populist version of frontline service/'value for money' rhetoric, capping 'core government administration' at December 2008 staffing levels, and requiring the SSC to move staff to delivery functions (New Zealand Cabinet 2009).…”
Section: The International Journal Of Human Resource Management 2377mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phillips and Taylor (:79) thus describe skill definitions as ‘saturated with sexual bias’, bearing ‘little relation to the actual amount of training or ability required …’ (see also Cockburn, ). With service jobs now the main employment source, particularly for women, some feminists argue for a new construction of skill (Gatta et al, ; Hall and Reed, ; Hampson and Junor, ). Others argue that the main issue is not skill but bad jobs (Horrell et al, ).…”
Section: Skill and Its Social Constructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Workers, however, may be able to claim skill through legal or industrial campaigns. The managerial tool of job evaluation has been used with some success to gain skill recognition in feminised jobs (Hall and Reed, 2007;Steinberg, 1990). In Australia, the industrial relations system, which allows collective skill assessments based on work value claims, is a potential pay equity vehicle.…”
Section: Insights From Labour Process Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such real practical expertise is often under-recognised and unrewarded (Gatta et al, 2007), and one reason for this is lack of a vocabulary to register certain tacit skills and the levels at which they are applied. Pay and employment equity are advanced only through political contestation, but an adequate skill vocabulary may be part of such contestation (Hall and Reed, 2007).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%