From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market

In-house family ties within workplaces are a non-negligible phenomenon on the labour market. Drawing on organizational and geographical perspectives and based on thematic analysis of 40 interviews with human resource managers, we analyse how family ties are viewed and managed in organizations on th...

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Main Authors: Kerstin Westin, Katarina Haugen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2019-11-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/73001
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spelling doaj-5c0cb02514c541239205117d497074162020-11-25T02:32:50ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172019-11-01197210.11143/fennia.73001From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour marketKerstin Westin0Katarina Haugen1Dept. of Geography and Economic HistoryHuman Geography Unit, Department of Society and Economy, School of Business, Economics and Law, University of Gothenburg In-house family ties within workplaces are a non-negligible phenomenon on the labour market. Drawing on organizational and geographical perspectives and based on thematic analysis of 40 interviews with human resource managers, we analyse how family ties are viewed and managed in organizations on the Swedish labour market. Based on the empirical analysis, we suggest that there are two different logics of human resource management concerning in-house family ties: a traditional, pragmatic and informal logic which expresses an accepting view; and a modern, meritocratic and formal logic associated with a disapproving view. Moreover, the informal logic seems to be increasingly challenged by formalization of human resource processes in both urban and rural settings. However, the analysis indicates that in smaller labour markets this shift is somewhat restrained by the limited supply of labour and socially tight knit local communities. Also, it seems that the change often meets resistance from supporters of the informal logic, and there is dissonance across different professional groups across and within organizations. https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/73001
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerstin Westin
Katarina Haugen
spellingShingle Kerstin Westin
Katarina Haugen
From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
author_facet Kerstin Westin
Katarina Haugen
author_sort Kerstin Westin
title From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market
title_short From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market
title_full From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market
title_fullStr From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market
title_full_unstemmed From pragmatism to meritocracy? Views on in-house family ties on the Swedish labour market
title_sort from pragmatism to meritocracy? views on in-house family ties on the swedish labour market
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
issn 1798-5617
publishDate 2019-11-01
description In-house family ties within workplaces are a non-negligible phenomenon on the labour market. Drawing on organizational and geographical perspectives and based on thematic analysis of 40 interviews with human resource managers, we analyse how family ties are viewed and managed in organizations on the Swedish labour market. Based on the empirical analysis, we suggest that there are two different logics of human resource management concerning in-house family ties: a traditional, pragmatic and informal logic which expresses an accepting view; and a modern, meritocratic and formal logic associated with a disapproving view. Moreover, the informal logic seems to be increasingly challenged by formalization of human resource processes in both urban and rural settings. However, the analysis indicates that in smaller labour markets this shift is somewhat restrained by the limited supply of labour and socially tight knit local communities. Also, it seems that the change often meets resistance from supporters of the informal logic, and there is dissonance across different professional groups across and within organizations.
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/73001
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AT katarinahaugen frompragmatismtomeritocracyviewsoninhousefamilytiesontheswedishlabourmarket
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