Shaping the bargaining agenda. The Audit Commission and public service reform in British local government

Article


Roper, I., Higgins, P. and James, P. 2007. Shaping the bargaining agenda. The Audit Commission and public service reform in British local government. The International Journal of Human Resource Management. 18 (9), pp. 1589-1607. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585190701570650
TypeArticle
TitleShaping the bargaining agenda. The Audit Commission and public service reform in British local government
AuthorsRoper, I., Higgins, P. and James, P.
Abstract

This article examines the role of the Audit Commission (AC) in local government collective bargaining. While the AC has no official role in such bargaining, it has a role in monitoring the performance of local government services. In this role the AC has a clear potential, in the context of the government's 'modernization' agenda - as manifested in its 'Best Value' regime, for influencing both the content of collective agreements, and the process of collective bargaining, where these are seen to conflict with other Best Value objectives - particularly in relation to external competition. The research conducted involved a content analysis of AC inspection reports on human resource services and longitudinal case studies of two local authority union branches' experiences of Best Value and the role of the AC. The findings from the inspection reports indicate that, while the AC is actually acting to promote activities that could be seen as supportive of union bargaining agendas, notably in relation to equality type issues, they are also supporting service externalisation and thereby acting to limit the scope of their impact. The reports also indicate that, despite there being prescribed 'best practice' for local government employment relations ('social partnership' with unions), the AC is not promoting any such engagement with unions. Evidence from the case studies add weight to these observations: the AC, in one case, was deeply suspicious of an attempted union management agreement on procurement, while in the other, the AC made no criticism of the costly effects that externalization had on union-management relations.

Research GroupDiversity and Gender group
Employment Relations group
PublisherRoutledge
JournalThe International Journal of Human Resource Management
ISSN0958-5192
Electronic1466-4399
Publication dates
PrintSep 2007
Print19 Sep 2007
Publication process dates
Deposited24 Oct 2008
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/09585190701570650
LanguageEnglish
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