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Dear colleagues (apologies for cross-posting),



The purpose of this email is to provide you with an update on what’s 
happening at 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583> Human 
Resource Management Journal (Wiley-Blackwell). There has been a range of 
editorial changes over the past 12 months that we would like to keep you 
abreast of and to remind you of recent and forthcoming special issues and 
our provocation paper series. This email also serves as a General Call for 
high quality articles on any aspect of employment studies but especially 
those focused on issues related to the management of people at work. 
Qualitative, quantitative and mixed method studies are all welcome. Finally, 
we are delighted to announce a call for submissions to our new Review & 
Provocation Paper Section. While we have had an invited provocation paper 
series in place for a few years (you can access these papers 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583/homepage/provocation_papers.htm> 
here) we are now opening that up and adding a review paper option (for full 
details see below and here 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583/asset/homepages/Call_for_Provocation_Abstracts_2017.pdf?v=1&s=3d96b01b81ade691fe1755c61b2bc6b36feb39e7> 
 ).



HRMJ Overview

Human Resource Management Journal (HRMJ) is a scholarly journal, published 
by Wiley-Blackwell, which aims to promote the theory and practice of HRM, to 
provide an international forum for discussion and debate, and to stress the 
critical importance of people management to a wide range of economic, 
political and social concerns. HRMJ’s focus lies in providing a critical 
link between high quality academic research and the practical implications 
for business practice. Over the last decade, HRMJ has broadened its 
editorial scope to become more globally orientated and has strengthened the 
international character of its Editorial Team and Board.



HRMJ seeks to publish well-written, well-researched and well-informed 
articles on any aspect of employment studies but especially those focused on 
issues related to the management of people at work. Articles should appeal 
both to practitioners and academics by virtue of their contribution to 
contemporary issues, the good use of theory and research and well-founded 
conclusions and practical implications. HRMJ is open to qualitative, 
quantitative and mixed methods approaches



HRMJ operates a minimum of double blind-review. Our review system seeks to 
provide constructive, critical and timely feedback (average days from 
submission to final decision is less than 90 days) on submissions.



HRMJ is accessed by almost 5,000 institutions and libraries worldwide. HRMJ 
articles average 130,000 annual downloads.



In 2016, we had almost 360 original submissions and our paper acceptance 
rate stands at 9.8%.



Journal Reputation and Rankings

HRMJ’s one-year ISI impact factor is currently 1.845, ranking us 6th out of 
26 journals in the "industrial and labor relations" category, and 71st out 
of 192 journals in the “management” category.



The journal is ranked as a "4", reserved for journals that “publish the most 
original and best-executed research” in the current Association of Business 
Schools (ABS) Academic Journal Guide (UK).  The journal is also ranked ‘A’ 
by the Australian Business Deans Council journal list.



Editorial Team

Over the past year, the editorial team has changed significantly at HRMJ. We 
now have 4 Editors-in-Chief:



Co Editors-in-Chief

·         Elaine Farndale, The Pennsylvania State University, USA [ 
<applewebdata://3DB1CF40-9B04-4A5E-BE83-E92B2562D098/UrlBlockedError.aspx> 
[log in to unmask]]  / Tilburg University, The Netherlands

·         Anthony McDonnell, University College Cork, Ireland [ 
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]]

·         Dora Scholarios, University of Strathclyde, UK [ 
<applewebdata://3DB1CF40-9B04-4A5E-BE83-E92B2562D098/UrlBlockedError.aspx> 
[log in to unmask]]

·         Adrian Wilkinson, Griffith University, Australia [ 
<applewebdata://3DB1CF40-9B04-4A5E-BE83-E92B2562D098/UrlBlockedError.aspx> 
[log in to unmask]]



We have also increased our Associated Editorial Team owing to the increase 
in paper submissions in recent years:



Associate Editors

·         Katie Bailey, University of Sussex, UK

·         Edel Conway, Dublin City University, Ireland

·         Anders Dysvik, BI Norwegian Business School, Norway

·         Martin Edwards, King's College London, UK

·         Kaifeng Jiang, Mendoza College of Business at University of Notre 
Dame, USA

·         Gill Kirton, Queen Mary University of London, UK

·         Mila Lazarova, Simon Fraser University, Canada

·         Helen Liu, Pennstate College of the Liberal Arts, USA

·         Ashly H. Pinnington, The British University in Dubai, UAE

·         Amanda Pyman, Monash University, Australia

·         B. Sebastian Reiche, IESE Business School, Spain

·         Andrew Timming, University of St Andrews, UK



We have also recently expanded the number and improved the diversity and 
international coverage of our Editorial Board, the names of which are 
detailed below:



cid:[log in to unmask]

Recent and Forthcoming Special Issues

In Issue 2, 2016 we published a special issue on ‘Understanding Mediating 
Variables & Their Outcomes’. This was guest edited by Peter Boxall, James 
Guthrie and Jaap Pauuwe. You can access these papers 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/hrmj.v26.2/issuetoc> here.



We also have a forthcoming special issue on HRM and Innovation being readied 
which will be published in 2017.



There are two current special issue call for papers open. Details can be 
found in the attached document and at the weblinks below. Please do promote 
these calls and consider submitting your best quality work to them. We are 
very excited about the potential impact these issues may have.



·         Exploring trade-offs between employee well-being and 
organizational performance: The role of Human Resource Management.
Guest Editors: Karina Van De Voorde, Marc Van Veldhoven and Riccardo Peccei

Submission deadline: 1 March 2017. Manuscripts can be submitted from 
February 1.

Call for papers can be accessed by clicking 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583/asset/homepages/HRMJ_Special_Issue_CFP.pdf?v=1&s=cbe1bfc5a550affeb7d1b88e06b739a0204b1e12> 
here.



·         New Avenues in International Careers Research
Guest Editors: Adam Smale, Jon Briscoe, Michael Dickman, Wolfgang Mayrhofer 
and Emma Parry
Submission deadline: 3 April 2017. Manuscripts can be submitted from March 
1.

Call for papers can be accessed by clicking 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583/asset/homepages/Special_Issue_CfP__HRMJ_.pdf?v=1&s=d40c89393dee3438d7bf2406587e01bd176a987a> 
here.



Review and Provocation Section

We would like to invite authors to submit extended abstracts for our new 
Review & Provocation Section. We began the provocation series as part of our 
volume 21 and the invited series has been very successful. The objective of 
the provocation series was in stimulating debate in key areas of HRM. 
Details on all published provocation papers can be found by clicking 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583/homepage/provocation_papers.htm> 
here.



We will continue to invite such pieces but are now seeking to open the 
opportunity to others, so we are inviting extended 1,000 word abstracts from 
those interested to be submitted between June 1, 2017 and July 1, 2017 via 
HRMJ’s online submission portal (please be sure to select Review/Provocation 
as the submission type).



In addition, we are also starting a new section on Reviews. We invited John 
Delery and David Guest to start us off but are seeking to open this out too 
now. These inaugural review papers are forthcoming in the first issue of 
2017. Consequently, we also are inviting extended 1,000 word abstracts to be 
submitted by 1 July 2017. We do not seek to impose a single structure on our 
reviews. There could be a number of ways of contributing conceptually – a 
systematic review (which could link to policy or practice issues), a 
conceptual review proposing new research questions/propositions, or thought 
pieces which foreshadow new directions.



The process for the Review and Provocation Section will be that the extended 
abstracts will be evaluated by the editors and those invited to submit full 
papers will be subject to standard editorial review. Full papers should be 
submitted within 6 months of the invitation.



Please note that proposals may not be submitted until June 1, 2017 and HRMJ 
will not be able to consider late submissions. Full details, including 
guidance on evaluation criteria and expectations of elements required in the 
extended abstracts, on the call for submissions to this new section can be 
found in the attachment.



Recently Published Papers



Text and metatext in the resource-based view

Jay B. Barney and Alison Mackey

 <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12123/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12123/full



This paper distinguishes between text and metatext in the resource-based 
view (RBV) – that is, the actual words and logic fundamental to the RBV (the 
text) and the traditions, interpretations and applications of the theory 
(the metatext). It argues that Kaufman's (2015) criticism of the RBV as 
applied to strategic human resource management actually focuses on RBV 
metatext and not text. Indeed, unlike some RBV metatext, RBV text actually 
has a great deal to say about research and practice in strategic human 
resource management.



Will the real RBV please stand up?

Bruce E. Kaufman

 <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12124/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12124/full



This paper continues a dialogue between Kaufman and Barney and Mackey about 
the resource-based view (RBV). Specifically, Kaufmann offers a response to a 
range of points raised by Barney and Mackey in their criticism of Kaufman’s 
(2015) paper published at HRMJ.



Note: The original article - The RBV theory foundation of strategic HRM: 
critical flaws, problems for research and practice, and an alternative 
economics paradigm - published in HRMJ that brought these papers (debate) 
can be accessed here: 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12085/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12085/full





EARLY VIEW PAPERS



Does contingent pay encourage positive employee attitudes and intensify 
work?

Chidiebere Ogbonnaya, Kevin Daniels and Karina Nielsen

 <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12130/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12130/full



This article explores the relationships between three dimensions of 
contingent pay – performance-related pay, profit-related pay and employee 
share-ownership – and positive employee attitudes (job satisfaction, 
employee commitment and trust in management). The article also examines a 
conflicting argument that contingent pay may intensify work, and this can 
detract from its positive impact on employee attitudes. Of the three 
contingent pay dimensions, only performance-related pay had direct positive 
relationships with all three employee attitudes. Profit-related pay and 
employee share-ownership had a mix of negative and no significant direct 
relationships with employee attitudes, but profit-related pay showed 
U-shaped curvilinear relationships with all three employee attitudes. The 
results also indicated that performance-related pay is associated with work 
intensification, and this offsets some of its positive impact on employee 
attitudes.



Employee development and voluntary turnover: testing the employability 
paradox

Jill Nelissen, Anneleen Forrier and Marijke Verbruggen

 <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12136/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12136/full



The employability paradox is a concern among employers. It states that 
development activities enhancing employees' employability also increase the 
risk for employee turnover. This study examined this paradox and probed the 
relationship between six development activities and voluntary turnover 
mediated by perceived employability. We tested both a turnover-stimulating 
path via perceived external employability (i.e. perceived job alternatives 
with other employers) and a retention path via perceived internal 
employability (i.e. perceived job alternatives with the current employer) by 
using two-wave longitudinal data from 588 employees. The results put the 
turnover risk into perspective: only upward job transition positively 
influenced turnover via perceived external employability. Also, the 
retention path via perceived internal employability was not supported: 
several development activities were positively related with perceived 
internal employability, but perceived internal employability did not 
influence turnover. We did, however, find a direct retention effect of skill 
utilisation. Overall, the results downplay the employability paradox.



Human resource business partner lifecycle model: exploring how the 
relationship between HRBPs and their line manager partners evolves

Martin McCracken, Paula O'Kane, Travor C. Brown and Mark McCrory

 <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12125/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12125/full



The human resources business partner (HRBP) role is advocated as a way for 
human resource (HR) professionals and the HR profession to become more 
strategic and less transactional, necessitating the development of different 
competencies. Few researchers have examined how the HRBP Model plays out in 
practice, over time, from the perspective of HR professionals and their line 
manager partners (LMPs). We collected data through interviews and focus 
groups with both these stakeholders at three UK organisations to understand 
the dynamics of the individual HRBP–LMP relationship. After analysing the 
data, we propose an HRBP Lifecycle Model. The model suggests the 
relationship between the parties is dynamic, complex and dependent upon the 
organisational culture as well as the skills and competencies of the main 
stakeholders in the partnership.



Managing five paradoxes of knowledge exchange in networked organizations: 
new priorities for HRM?

Christopher Mabey and Shasha Zhao

 <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12106/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1748-8583.12106/full



The life-blood of most organizations is knowledge. Too often, the very 
mechanisms set up to facilitate knowledge flow militate against it. This is 
because they are instituted in a top-down way, they are cumbersome to manage 
and the bridges of trust fail to get built. In their thirst for innovation, 
the tendency is for firms to set up elaborate transmission channels and 
governance systems. As a result, staff are drowned in a deluge of mundane 
intranet messages and bewildered by matrix structures, while off-the-wall 
ideas and mould-breaking insights are routinely missed. Added to this is the 
challenge of operating across professional, cultural, regional and 
linguistic boundaries, where ways of sharing knowledge differ markedly, even 
within the same project team. Drawing upon extensive research with 
scientists in the ATLAS collaboration (a high-energy particle physics 
experiment comprising 3,500 scientists from 38 countries), we explore five 
paradoxes associated with knowledge exchange in global networks. Each 
paradox leads to a proposition which takes the theory and practice of 
knowledge management in a fresh direction. We conclude by outlining a number 
of HRM priorities for international knowledge-intensive organizations.



Best wishes,

Adrian, Anthony, Dora & Elaine (Co Editors-in-Chief)



Dr Elaine Farndale

Associate Professor of Human Resource Management

Co-Editor-in-Chief of Human Resource Management Journal: 
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1748-8583

Founder and Director, Center for International Human Resource Studies: 
<http://ler.la.psu.edu/cihrs> http://ler.la.psu.edu/cihrs



School of Labor and Employment Relations

The Pennsylvania State University

501c Keller Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA

email:  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]; phone: +1 814-867-3320

webpage:  <http://ler.la.psu.edu/directory/euf3> 
http://ler.la.psu.edu/directory/euf3

---

Latest article:

Employee Voice and Work Engagement:  Macro, Meso and Micro-level Drivers of 
Convergence?

 <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053482216300213> 
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053482216300213




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