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Age-Related Human Resource Management Policies and Practices: Antecedents, Outcomes, and Conceptualizations
Author(s) -
Stephan Boehm,
Heike Schröder,
P. Matthijs Bal
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
work aging and retirement
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2054-4650
DOI - 10.1093/workar/waab024
Subject(s) - workforce , employability , human resource management , typology , legislation , human resources , aging in the american workforce , business , knowledge management , productivity , public relations , psychology , political science , sociology , management , economic growth , economics , computer science , pedagogy , anthropology , law
Due to the demographic change in age, societies, firms, and individuals struggle with the need to postpone retirement while keeping up motivation, performance, and health throughout employees’ working life. Organizations, and specifically the Human Resource Management (HRM) practices they design and implement, take a central role in this process. Being influenced by macro-level trends such as new legislation, organizational HRM practices affect outcomes such as productivity and employability both at the firm and individual level of analysis. This editorial introduces the Special Issue on “Age-related Human Resource Management Policies and Practices” by conducting an interdisciplinary literature review. We offer an organizing framework that spans the macro-, meso-, and individual level and discusses major antecedents, boundary conditions, and outcomes of age-related HRM practices. Further, we propose a typology of HRM practices and discuss the role of individual HRM dimensions versus bundles of HRM practices in dealing with an aging and more age-diverse workforce. Building on these considerations, we introduce the eight articles included in this special issue. Finally, taking stock of our review and the new studies presented here, we deduct some recommendations for future research in the field of age-related HRM.

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