The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections

The employment relationship, a child of achaic and medieval English law of master and Servant, arises in law in circumstances where the Master has control over his Servant. Although the factual basis of control may have been true in times of yore - apprenticeship contracts being the archetypal kind...

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Main Authors: Effendi, Baba, Ho, Emily Sook Fen, Lee, Richard Voon Kean
Other Authors: Dennis Ong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/60109
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-60109
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-601092023-05-19T06:16:17Z The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections Effendi, Baba Ho, Emily Sook Fen Lee, Richard Voon Kean Dennis Ong Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business The employment relationship, a child of achaic and medieval English law of master and Servant, arises in law in circumstances where the Master has control over his Servant. Although the factual basis of control may have been true in times of yore - apprenticeship contracts being the archetypal kind - the element of control began to erode gradually, but surely. despite the Industrial Revolution and its emphasis on work specialisation and division of labour, the test seemed to have survived extinction - but only just. The advent of the 20th century - shift of knowledge from employer to employee and the recognition of management studies as a discipline - did little to support the anachronistic legal concepts of control. The problem is that, while the law looked to the past for guidance, management studies was more firmly rooted to reality and practice, and was progressive and forward-looking. The reality of the workplace was not some dusty case taken from library shelves, but something that was vibrant and changing: worker autonomy, profit sharing, decentralisation of management hierarchy - to name a few - are the challenges to the modern employment relationship. Unfortunately, the law - past the age of child bearing - has not been able to keep pace with new developments. This paper aims to show that the legal analysis of the employment relationship needs reassessing, and change if the law is to keep up with the realities of the workplace. The law must never be too conceited to disregard other discipline that might illumine its path for the future. ACCOUNTANCY 2014-05-22T05:47:04Z 2014-05-22T05:47:04Z 1994 1994 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/60109 en Nanyang Technological University 109 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business
Effendi, Baba
Ho, Emily Sook Fen
Lee, Richard Voon Kean
The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
description The employment relationship, a child of achaic and medieval English law of master and Servant, arises in law in circumstances where the Master has control over his Servant. Although the factual basis of control may have been true in times of yore - apprenticeship contracts being the archetypal kind - the element of control began to erode gradually, but surely. despite the Industrial Revolution and its emphasis on work specialisation and division of labour, the test seemed to have survived extinction - but only just. The advent of the 20th century - shift of knowledge from employer to employee and the recognition of management studies as a discipline - did little to support the anachronistic legal concepts of control. The problem is that, while the law looked to the past for guidance, management studies was more firmly rooted to reality and practice, and was progressive and forward-looking. The reality of the workplace was not some dusty case taken from library shelves, but something that was vibrant and changing: worker autonomy, profit sharing, decentralisation of management hierarchy - to name a few - are the challenges to the modern employment relationship. Unfortunately, the law - past the age of child bearing - has not been able to keep pace with new developments. This paper aims to show that the legal analysis of the employment relationship needs reassessing, and change if the law is to keep up with the realities of the workplace. The law must never be too conceited to disregard other discipline that might illumine its path for the future.
author2 Dennis Ong
author_facet Dennis Ong
Effendi, Baba
Ho, Emily Sook Fen
Lee, Richard Voon Kean
format Final Year Project
author Effendi, Baba
Ho, Emily Sook Fen
Lee, Richard Voon Kean
author_sort Effendi, Baba
title The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
title_short The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
title_full The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
title_fullStr The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
title_full_unstemmed The modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
title_sort modern employee : managerial challenges to legal intellections
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/60109
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