Human resources is a relatively
modern management term, coined in the 1960s. The origins of the function arose in organizations that
introduced 'welfare management' practices and also in those that adopted the principles of 'scientific
management'. From these terms emerged a largely administrative management activity, co-ordinating a range of
worker related processes and becoming known, in time as the 'personnel function'. Human resources
progressively became the more usual name for this function, in the first instance in the United States as
well as multinational corporations, reflecting the adoption of a more quantitative as well as strategic
approach to workforce management, demanded by corporate management and the greater competitiveness for
limited and highly skilled workers.
The use of the term 'human
resources' by organizations to describe the workforce capacity available to devote to the achievement of its
strategies has drawn upon concepts developed in Industrial/Organizational Psychology and
System
Theory. Human resources has at least
two related interpretations depending on context. The original usage derives from
political
economyand
economics, where it was traditionally
called labor, one of
four factors of
production– although this perspective has
shifted as a consequence of further ongoing research into more strategic
approaches.[1]This first usage is used more in
terms of 'human resources development' of the individuals within an organization, although the approach can
also be applied beyond the level of the organization to that of industry sectors and
nations.[2]
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