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Fox's Frames of Reference

Alan Fox's influential work from 1966 describes how managers have different "frames of reference" through which they view employment relations. He identified three ideal frames: pluralist, unitarist, and radical. The pluralist frame views the employment relationship as a coalition of interests with divergent goals, while the unitarist frame sees employment as a team with a common purpose and single authority. Pluralists accept that there are competing sources of leadership and loyalty within organizations, unlike unitarists who believe in one unified authority.
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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
7K views

Fox's Frames of Reference

Alan Fox's influential work from 1966 describes how managers have different "frames of reference" through which they view employment relations. He identified three ideal frames: pluralist, unitarist, and radical. The pluralist frame views the employment relationship as a coalition of interests with divergent goals, while the unitarist frame sees employment as a team with a common purpose and single authority. Pluralists accept that there are competing sources of leadership and loyalty within organizations, unlike unitarists who believe in one unified authority.
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Frames Of Reference

Alan Foxs (1966) highly influential way of looking at the employment relationship describes managers having alternative frames of reference. Everyone has a frame of reference, which can be understood as a lens through which one sees employment relations. He described three ideal (in the sense of perfect example) frames pluralist, unitarist, radical - people usually just talk about pluralism and unitarism. Frames [A] sociological viewpoint may help in the construction of a frame of reference through which the problems of industrial relations can be seen realistically and laid more open to solution perception determines judgments, which in turn determines subsequent behaviour. Unitarism vs Pluralism An alternative way of presenting this distinction would be to ask: What is the closest analogy to the enterprise - is it, or ought it to be, analogous to a team, unified by a common purpose [unitarism], or is it more plausibly viewed as a coalition of interests, a miniature democratic state composed of sectional groups with divergent interests over which the government tries to maintain some kind of dynamic equilibrium [pluralism]? Unitarism A unitary system has one source of authority and one focus of loyalty, which is why it suggests the team analogy. What pattern of behaviour do we expect from the members of the successful and healthy functioning team? We expect them to strive jointly towards a common objective, each pulling his [sic] weight to the best of his ability. Each accepts his place in his function gladly, following the leadership of the one so appointed. There are no oppositionary groups or factions, and therefore no rival leaders within the team. Nor are there any outside it; the team stands alone, its members owing allegiance to their own leaders but no others. Pluralism In place of a corporate unity reflected in a single focus of authority and loyalty, we have to accept the existence of rival sources of leadership and attachment. They need to be accepted above all, by whoever is ruling the plural society in question.

Quotes from Fox A. (1966) Industrial Sociology and Industrial Relations, Royal Commission on Trade Unions and Employers Associations, Research Papers 3, HMSO, London

True or False 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Employees do not have frames of reference HRM is unitarist There are no rulers in a pluralist organisation Unitarists believe trade unions are unnecessary Pluralists believe trade unions exist to cause conflict

Personal Opinion 1. 2. Do you think Foxs views are still relevant today? Why / Why not? Would you describe yourself as unitarist or pluralist, or neither?

3. Think of an organisation youve been a member in - was it unitarist or pluralist, or neither?


From www.kevinmorrell.org.uk

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