ISBN-13: 9783843355766 / Angielski / Miękka / 2010 / 288 str.
Employment agencies have become significant actors in industrial relations, and often play a complex intermediary function within the labour markets. This book provides a thorough insight on pay-rolling agencies. Pay-rolling agencies are a particular form of employment intermediaries through which employers attempt to bypass statutory obligations. The existing literature predominantly discusses employment agencies in their traditional legitimate role as these often function in the Western countries. In contrast with the conventional beliefs, analysis in this book, however, confirmed that there is a growing trend for agencies to be simply a sham arrangement resulting in acute marginalization and exploitation of agency workers. This refutes the notion that temporary agency work has arisen entirely organically out of pure economic reasons, rooted in the flexibility thesis. This enlarges our academic understanding of the reasons for the use of agency employment and also underscores the public policy significance of the issue. This book should, therefore, be particularly useful for HR academics, HR professionals and policy makers concerned with workers statutory entitlements.