Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/19857
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dc.contributor.authorFenwick, Taraen_UK
dc.contributor.editorPoell, RFen_UK
dc.contributor.editorRocco, TSen_UK
dc.contributor.editorRoth, GLen_UK
dc.date.accessioned2016-11-05T03:48:01Z-
dc.date.available2016-11-05T03:48:01Z-
dc.date.issued2014-08en_UK
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/19857-
dc.description.abstractThis chapter offers an introduction and overview to critical modes of enquiry and practice in human resource development. Since Barbara Townley’s (1994) Foucauldian analysis of HRD practices, critical HRD scholarship has burgeoned to the point where Callahan (2007) claims that it represents ‘a’ future of HRD research. Critical human resource development (CHRD) is by now, as evidenced in the collection edited by Stewart, Rigg and Trehan (2006), a diffuse association of critical perspectives, pedagogies, and declarations of what critical management means.  Two main principles, however, underpin this diverse scholarship. First, CHRD fundamentally promotes critical analysis of power relations, commonly focused on inequities as well as the issues of gender, diversity and their intersections emphasized by Metcalfe (2008), Bierema (2008), Alfred and Chlup (2010), and others. In context of human resource development studies, this analysis challenges the subjugation of human knowledge, skills, relationships and education to orthodoxies of rationalised, universalised organizational and management knowledge, goals and practices. CHRD assumes that managers and staff can learn, for example, to both notice and interrupt the ways organizational structures and HRD practices can compromise human dignity and health, ethical engagements with stakeholders, and ecological and social responsibility. Second, as part of the critical tradition, CHRD is oriented towards action - improving social life. It assumes that practitioners can learn to envision and help bring about reform of organizations and management practice to enable, in Kincheloe’s (1999) words, more just, equitable, life-giving and sustainable workplaces.  Tensions and dilemmas about what precisely is ‘critical’ and how to engage critical learning flourish within this field of CHRD as energetically as they do in the critical social sciences more broadly. This chapter takes up a broad discussion of these tensions, particularly around critiques of ‘emancipation’ and empowerment levelled at the more zealous, less reflexive enunciations of critical learning and development. A framework is outlined in an attempt to build upon the important work of CMS (e.g. Grey and Wilmott 2002) and critical pedagogy writers, and incorporate diverse other theoretical contributions to offer a more diffuse and rather less morally confident orientation to CHRD. This is not intended to provide a heuristic device for CHRD writers and practitioners, nor is it designed to embrace all diverse critical positions. It is a recognition of certain attitudes that bear similarity across selected critical perspectives, and a statement of values. These draw largely from those critical management studies focusing on questions of interests served by the organization of work, exclusions from the construction of knowledge (Alvesson & Willmott, 1996, p. 11), effects of economic ideologies, power relations underpinning organizational structures (Fournier & Grey, 2000), and discursive practices that regulate individuals within these structures (Townley, 1994). This framework also draws from critical and feminist pedagogies (e.g. Brookfield & Holst 2010) the injunction to engage people in critical analysis of social practices, texts and environments to examine the inequities produced and the possibility for more just and generative practices.  For the purposes of this framework, the general attitudes of these theories, not their specific approaches and objects, are integrated with critical management studies and critical adult education sources in terms of overall purpose, assumptions and implications for CHRD practice. This framework is not intended to totalize or harmonize the vibrant pluralism now flourishing in the general field of critical human resource development studies, but is offered as but one provisional, partial view among many possible approaches to critical approaches in HRD.  The first section of the chapter reviews existing writing in CHRD and outlines the tensions embedded in what comprises ‘critical’. The second develops a framework and principles that might delineate an approach to critical human resource development. Section three discusses a series of dilemmas inherent in these principles and in the general project of critical human resource development, both theoretical and practical. The final section offers approaches to CHRD that attempt to navigate these dilemmas without losing central critical principles.en_UK
dc.language.isoenen_UK
dc.publisherRoutledgeen_UK
dc.relationFenwick T (2014) Conceptualizing Critical HRD (CHRD): Tensions, Dilemmas, and Possibilities. In: Poell R, Rocco T & Roth G (eds.) The Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development. Routledge Companions in Business, Management and Accounting. London: Routledge, pp. 113-123. http://www.psypress.com/books/details/9780415820424/en_UK
dc.relation.ispartofseriesRoutledge Companions in Business, Management and Accountingen_UK
dc.rightsThis item has been embargoed for a period. During the embargo please use the Request a Copy feature at the foot of the Repository record to request a copy directly from the author. You can only request a copy if you wish to use this work for your own research or private study. Published in The Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development by Taylor & Francis. This is an electronic version of a book chapter published in The Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development. The Routledge Companion to Human Resource Development can be found online at: http://www.psypress.com/books/details/9780415820424/en_UK
dc.subjectcritical HRDen_UK
dc.subjectcritical management educationen_UK
dc.subjectmanagerialismen_UK
dc.subjectcritical pedagogyen_UK
dc.subjectreflexivityen_UK
dc.subjectcontradictionen_UK
dc.titleConceptualizing Critical HRD (CHRD): Tensions, Dilemmas, and Possibilitiesen_UK
dc.typePart of book or chapter of booken_UK
dc.rights.embargodate2016-05-01en_UK
dc.rights.embargoreason[Fenwick Critical HRD .pdf] Publisher requires embargo of 18 months after formal publication.en_UK
dc.citation.spage113en_UK
dc.citation.epage123en_UK
dc.citation.publicationstatusPublisheden_UK
dc.type.statusAM - Accepted Manuscripten_UK
dc.identifier.urlhttp://www.psypress.com/books/details/9780415820424/en_UK
dc.author.emailtara.fenwick@stir.ac.uken_UK
dc.citation.btitleThe Routledge Companion to Human Resource Developmenten_UK
dc.citation.isbn978-0-415-82042-4en_UK
dc.publisher.addressLondonen_UK
dc.contributor.affiliationEducationen_UK
dc.identifier.wtid634478en_UK
dcterms.dateAccepted2014-08-31en_UK
dc.date.filedepositdate2014-04-22en_UK
rioxxterms.typeBook chapteren_UK
rioxxterms.versionAMen_UK
local.rioxx.authorFenwick, Tara|en_UK
local.rioxx.projectInternal Project|University of Stirling|https://isni.org/isni/0000000122484331en_UK
local.rioxx.contributorPoell, RF|en_UK
local.rioxx.contributorRocco, TS|en_UK
local.rioxx.contributorRoth, GL|en_UK
local.rioxx.freetoreaddate2016-05-01en_UK
local.rioxx.licencehttp://www.rioxx.net/licenses/under-embargo-all-rights-reserved||2016-04-30en_UK
local.rioxx.licencehttp://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved|2016-05-01|en_UK
local.rioxx.filenameFenwick Critical HRD .pdfen_UK
local.rioxx.filecount1en_UK
local.rioxx.source978-0-415-82042-4en_UK
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