Difference between revisions of "Human Resources Best Management Practices"

From NGO Handbook
(Achieving the Motive, Means, and Opportunity in an Organizational Learning Environment)
 
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Best management of human resources entail fostering a dynamic learning environment where both the staff and management leaders are motivated to improve upon different programs as well as provide a system of accountability to outsiders. Bruce Britton, an international expert on organizational learning in NGOs, has worked extensively on these issues in 28 countries on three continents since he began as an organisational consultant and trainer in 1984. (Framework.org) He emphasizes that the leader must provide the motivation, opportunity, and means for employees to participate in the learning process. Accountability towards the people they represent is also crucial. Authors such as Dr. Jem Bendell, a leading expert in dealing with corporate and NGO responses to the challenges of globalization, points to the crucial need for management policies to maintain accountability towards the people they represent and to those their organizations affect. The difficulty lies in NGOs balancing between remaining accountable to the public it hopes to serve while remaining independent from pressure from government and donors. By building a nurturing learning environment and a system of accountability constitute solid management practices. This paper will expand upon the ideas of Britton and Bendell and will also be supplemented by real world cases and examples from several organizations.
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Best management of human resources entail fostering a dynamic learning environment where both the staff and management leaders are motivated to improve upon different programs as well as provide a system of accountability to outsiders. Bruce Britton, an international expert on organizational learning in NGOs, has worked extensively on these issues in 28 countries on three continents since he began as an organisational consultant and trainer in 1984. (Framework.org) He emphasizes that the leader must provide the motivation, opportunity, and means for employees to participate in the learning process. Accountability towards the people they represent is also crucial. Authors such as Dr. Jem Bendell, a leading expert in dealing with corporate and NGO responses to the challenges of globalization, points to the crucial need for management policies to maintain accountability towards the people they represent and to those their organizations affect. The difficulty lies in NGOs balancing between remaining accountable to the public it hopes to serve while remaining independent from pressure from government and donors. By building a nurturing learning environment and a system of accountability constitute solid management practices. This paper will expand upon the ideas of Britton and Bendell and will also be supplemented by real world cases and examples from several organizations. <membersonly>
  
 
==Organizational Learning as a Means of Building Better Management Practices==
 
==Organizational Learning as a Means of Building Better Management Practices==
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**Strengthen inter-personal relationships and build trust.
 
**Strengthen inter-personal relationships and build trust.
  
====Opportunity
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====Opportunity====
  
 
*'''Develop a planned strategy'''
 
*'''Develop a planned strategy'''

Latest revision as of 07:35, 17 July 2008

This article was drawn from an article prepared for the NGO Handbook by Sandy Yu titled, "Human Resources Best Management Practices".


Best management of human resources entail fostering a dynamic learning environment where both the staff and management leaders are motivated to improve upon different programs as well as provide a system of accountability to outsiders. Bruce Britton, an international expert on organizational learning in NGOs, has worked extensively on these issues in 28 countries on three continents since he began as an organisational consultant and trainer in 1984. (Framework.org) He emphasizes that the leader must provide the motivation, opportunity, and means for employees to participate in the learning process. Accountability towards the people they represent is also crucial. Authors such as Dr. Jem Bendell, a leading expert in dealing with corporate and NGO responses to the challenges of globalization, points to the crucial need for management policies to maintain accountability towards the people they represent and to those their organizations affect. The difficulty lies in NGOs balancing between remaining accountable to the public it hopes to serve while remaining independent from pressure from government and donors. By building a nurturing learning environment and a system of accountability constitute solid management practices. This paper will expand upon the ideas of Britton and Bendell and will also be supplemented by real world cases and examples from several organizations.


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