Influential Article Review - Asian HR Analysis on Methodological Options

Authors

  • Chad Harris
  • Adam Curtis
  • Thelma Horton

Keywords:

Methodological choices, Validity, HR practices, China, Contextualization

Abstract

This paper examines human resources management. We present insights from a highly influential paper. Here are the highlights from this paper: A twenty-year study of the Human Resource (HR) practices– outcome relationship has found that more rigorous methodologies have been adopted over time. However, several problematic features such as cross-sectional, single-informant, and single-level designs continue to be adopted (Bainbridge et al., Human Resource Management, 2016). Responding to calls for increased contextualization of research by investigating the relationship between the location of data collection and the methodological choices of researchers, this study answers the question “How unique are the methodological choices of HR research conducted in Asia?” Applying content analysis to 241 published articles, we compare internal, external, construct and statistical conclusion validity of studies collected in North America (n=66), Europe (n=95) and Asia (n=80, including 57 studies from China). Results show that despite similarities in cross-sectional, single-informant and single-level designs across regions, research conducted in Asia is mainly undertaken via field studies, using subjective outcome measures at the organizational level, following a post-predictive design. In addition, studies from Asia are more recent, and show a shorter time gap between data collection and publication. Theoretical and practical implications embedded in the dynamic context of Asia in general, and China more specifically are discussed. For our overseas readers, we then present the insights from this paper in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and German.

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Published

2019-12-14

How to Cite

Harris, C., Curtis, A., & Horton, T. (2019). Influential Article Review - Asian HR Analysis on Methodological Options. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 19(7). Retrieved from https://mail.articlegateway.com/index.php/JOP/article/view/3535

Issue

Section

Articles