Contract employment policy and research productivity of knowledge workers: an analysis of Spanish universities
Data de publicació
2017-05-05ISSN
1466-4399
Resum
This article investigates how contract employment practices adopted by universities—fixed-term contracts and permanent contracts—impact research productivity measured in terms of publications in scholarly journals. The empirical application considers the Spanish public higher education system for the period 2002–2008. We report an inverse U-shaped relationship between the rate fixed-term contracts and the research productivity of Spanish universities. That is, contract policies based on fixed-term contracts are conducive to research productivity; however, beyond a critical threshold value increases in the proportion of fixed-term contracts are associated with declining research productivity. These findings reveal that contract employment policies shape research productivity, and that flexible and balanced contract practices are critical for enhancing universities’ research productivity. The results suggest that the excessive use of fixed-term contracts might create an unstable working environment that limits the universities’ capacity to capitalize on their knowledge workers. Policy implications and future research avenues are discussed.
Tipus de document
Article
Versió del document
Versió acceptada
Llengua
Anglès
Matèries (CDU)
33 - Economia
Paraules clau
Pàgines
35
Publicat per
Routledge
Publicat a
The International Journal of Human Resource Management
Citació
Lafuente González, Esteban Miguel; Berbegal-Mirabent, Jasmina. «Contract employment policy and research productivity of knowledge workers: an analysis of Spanish universities». The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 2017. Disponible en: <https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09585192.2017.1323226?scroll=top&needAccess=true>. Fecha de acceso: 17 jun. 2019. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2017.1323226
Número de l'acord de la subvenció
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/MINECO/ECO2013-48496-C4-4-R
Nota
For their ideas and insightful comments that helped us to improve the paper we are grateful to Rodrigo Rabetino (University of Vaasa, Finland), László Szerb (University of Pécs, Hungary), Yancy Vaillant (Toulouse Business School, France) and Ferran Vendrell-Herrero (University of Birmingham, UK). Esteban Lafuente acknowledges financial support by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Grant number: ECO2013-48496-C4-4-R).
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Drets
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