“…The HRM function had a personnel rather than an HRM orientation (Morley et al, 2012), which resulted in the absence of clearly articulated human resource strategy (Gurkov & Zelenova, 2009in Morley et al, 2012. However, after the fall of the socialist regimes throughout CEE, in order to respond to free market system pressures, HRM started taking hold in the discourse of management thinking and in emerging practice, began to be institutionalized, and moved from mostly administrative to more business-oriented function (Taylor & Walley, 2002;Weinstein & Obloj, 2002;Brewster et al, 2010;Bourke & Crowley, 2015). Foreign-owned companies especially contributed to the emergence of professional HRM (Svetlik et al, 2010); however, during the transition period East European HRM practices were still considered immature compared to the West (Kiriazov et al, 2000), as the transition period was characterized by years of resistance and vacuum in the personnel area (Karoliny et al, 2009).…”