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What Does it Mean to Comply

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Haines (1997) identified two kinds of organisational responses to workplace fatalities. ... Haines (1997) showed significant external pressures which affect ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What Does it Mean to Comply


1
What Does it Mean to Comply?
  • Exploring Business Reponses to Labour Regulation

2
Compliance from the perspective of regulators
  • Overly simplistic to think that compliance is
    simply about regulators comparing the way in
    which actual behaviour conforms the requirements
    of published rules or standards
  • Compliance from the regulators perspective is
    not just a single event, but a process of
    extended and endless negotiation (Manning, 1988)
  • Parties build up social relationships and mutual
    trust which enables bargaining relationship to be
    maintained

3
Why?
  • Business regulation more often than not imposes
    ongoing (or continuing or repetitive) obligations
  • It may take considerable time for organisations
    to organise themselves to reach the required
    standards

4
  • 2. Rules and standards are often unclear about
    what is meant by compliance
  • Complexities of language
  • Impossible to standardise required performance
  • Preference for broad, inclusive rules

5
Consequences of ambiguity of standards
  • Provide regulators with significant discretion in
    interpretation
  • Interpretation may be the result of extended
    negotiation between policy makers, field
    inspectors, regulated, and advisers of the
    regulated

6
  • 3. The interpretation of facts may be challenging
  • Sources of the problem and solutions may need
    constant negotiation and re-negotiation

7
Working Definitions of Compliance
  • Full compliance the set of conditions
    regulators are aiming at (legal and
    administrative definitions)
  • Temporary definitions of compliance less than
    full compliance, but tolerated in the short term
  • Acceptable non-compliance
  • Unacceptable compliance

8
  • Aggregated compliance look at matters (general
    approach and response to legal requirements) over
    a period of time
  • Judgments about compliance often build in broader
    moral considerations

9
Choice of enforcement approach
  • One influencing factor is characterisation of
    regulatees and their responses to regulatory
    strategies (see Kagan and Scholtz, Hawkins,
    Hutter, Black, Ayres and Braithwaite)
  • Amoral calculators (rational actors)
  • Political citizens (inclined to comply, but wont
    if dont agree with goals etc)
  • Organisationally incompetent (inadequate
    knowledge or internal controls)
  • Irrational non-compliers (malicious,
    ill-intentioned, ill-informed)

10
Business Reponses to Constitutive Regulation
Project
  • A study of study on the way in which business
    firms respond to legal rules in three areas of
    labour law
  • (i) occupational health and safety (OHS)
    regulation,
  • (ii) unfair dismissal law, and
  • (iii) equal employment (EO) and sexual harassment
    law.

11
Constitutive regulation
  • Uses legal norms to constitute structures,
    procedures and routines which are required to be
    adopted and internalised by regulated
    organisations, so that these structures,
    procedures and routines become part of the normal
    operating activities of the organisation.
  • The aim is for legal norms to infiltrate deep
    into the organisation to require the
    organisation, and the individuals within it, to
    act responsibly (Hutter, 2001)

12
Research Questions
  • What steps do business organisations take to
    comply with the legal obligations? What
    difficulties or problems did they experiences?
  • Can corporate cultures, impacting upon
    compliance, be identified?
  • What factors influence corporate culture eg size
    and organisational structure etc external
    factors (industry, place in contractual hierarchy
    etc) regulation?

13
Conceptual Framework for Business Responses
  • Haines (1997) identified two kinds of
    organisational responses to workplace fatalities.
  • Some organisations responded in a virtuous
    manner, ensuring that as much thought as possible
    went into the changes that were made and that the
    response was far reaching .
  • Others took a blinkered response, confining
    themselves to obvious changes, to limiting legal
    liability, and leaving broader issues unexamined.

14
Varieties of organisational responses to
regulatory requirements
  • Conformity accept and adopt regulatory (i)
    goals and (ii) institutional means
  • Innovation accept (i), but achieve with means
    other than (ii)
  • Ritualism reluctant to accept (i), and
    implement (ii) perfunctorily
  • Retreatism no engagement with (i) or (ii)
  • Rebellion reject (i) and (ii) and substitute
    with antipathetic goals and means
  • (Braithwaite, 1993, building on Merton,
    1968)

15
External pressures shaping business responses
  • Haines (1997) showed significant external
    pressures which affect organisations ability to
    conform or be innovative in complying with
    regulatory requirements.
  • Organisational culture was the touchstone
    (Haines, 1997 216). (An organisations
    assumptions about how success was to be
    achieved). A virtuous culture made a virtuous
    response possible, and a blinkered culture was
    likely to lead to a blinkered response.

16
  • Organisational behaviour and organisational
    responses to regulation could only be understood
    when the social context ( the regulatory
    space) was taken into account.
  • The regulatory space is affected by the size of
    the organisation, the industry within which it
    operates, industry competitiveness, and the
    organisations position within the industry.
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