0%

Book Description

There are 60 million health care workers globally and most of this workforce consists of nurses, as they are key providers of primary health care. Historically, the global nurse occupation has been predominately female and segregated along gendered, racialised and classed hierarchies. In the last decade, new actors have emerged in the management of health care human resources, specifically from the corporate sector, which has created new interactions, networks, and organisational practices.

This book urgently calls for the reconceptualisation in the theoretical framing of the globalised nurse occupation from International Human Resource Management (IHRM) to Transnational Human Resource Management (THRM). Specifically, the book draws on critical human resource management literature and transnational feminist theories to frame the strategies and practices used to manage nurses across geographical sites of knowledge production and power, which centralise on how and by whom nurses are managed. In its current managerial form, the author argues that the nurses are constructed and produced as resources to be packaged for clients in public and private organisations.

 

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Figures
  7. List of Tables
  8. List of Context Boxes
  9. Preface
  10. 1 Transnational Management of Globalised Workers: Nurses Beyond Human Resources
  11. Part 1 Framing
    1. 2 Perspectives on the Transnationalisation of Care and the Nurse Labour Market
    2. 3 Framing Transnational Human Resource Management of Nurse Labour
  12. Part 2 Situating
    1. 4 Representatives and Social Worlds in the Transnational Human Resource Management of Nurse Labour
    2. 5 Mapping Social Worlds Through Discourse, Text, and Materiality
  13. Part 3 A Situation
    1. 6 Transnational Management of Nurses in Producer-Based Care Networks in Finland
    2. 7 Discursive Positions and Structural Barriers to Equality in Transnational Human Resource Management
    3. 8 Conclusions
  14. Appendix: Table of Interviews
  15. Index
13.59.231.155