S'ware Metrics Home

Book Store PMP Books PDAs
S'ware Metrics Six Sigma LCD Monitors
Requirements Management PMBOK Books
Team Building Use Case DVD Players

Personnel Law (4th Edition)


Personnel Law (4th Edition)

Personnel Law (4th Edition)

List Price: $102.67
Our Price:
$102.67
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


Manufacturer: Prentice Hall
Author: Kenneth L. Sovereign
Binding: Paperback
Publication Date: 1998-10-10
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Label: Prentice Hall
Number Of Pages: 384
Features:


Editorial Review:

The Fourth Edition offers a comprehensive treatment of the entire subject of personnel law that reflects the author's personal experience as both a practicing lawyer and personnel director. Written in simple language that bridges the gap between law and human relations management, the new edition explores the legal considerations that occur when an employer-employee relationship is established, and focuses on permissible activities in handling personnel problems, when to seek legal counsel, and how to stay out of court. Offers new case law where the legal principles have been changed by the courts. Covers all the new statutes. Continues to find an economical way for the Epersonnel function to live with its law partner,<70> whose principles are laid down by legislation and interpreted by the courts. An excellent resource for those in the personnel/ human resources field.


Cached date: AWS Called=true

You may also be interested in these products:
An Introduction to the Law of Employment Discrimination (I L R Bulletin)
An Introduction to the Law of Employment Discrimination (I L R Bulletin)
The Ethical Practice of Psychology in Organizations (Society for Industrial & Organizational Psychology (SIOP))
The Ethical Practice of Psychology in Organizations (Society for Industrial & Organizational Psychology (SIOP))
Leadership: Research Findings, Practice, and Skills
Leadership: Research Findings, Practice, and Skills
Using Qualitative Methods in Organizational Research (Organizational Research Methods)
Using Qualitative Methods in Organizational Research (Organizational Research Methods)
Designing and Using Organizational Surveys: A Seven-Step Process (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series)
Designing and Using Organizational Surveys: A Seven-Step Process (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series)


These categories may also be of interest to you:


Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: 1.5

do NOT use this as a textbook 2002-11-06
The very first sentence of the Prologue of this book contains a grammatical error (it should be "principles," not "principals") and I am sorry to say that things don't get much better. I purchased this book as a text for an Employment Law class and it was terrible; I quit using it halfway through the course and recommended the instructor find another text. The author seems to think he's the most credible person in the world but, as someone who is also a human resources practitioner, I can assert from experience that many of his opinions (several of which are presented as "facts") are wrong. He clearly doesn't even understand what the field of human resources IS, and in many cases I found his tone very offensive.

In addition to using more current information, Sovereign would be well-advised to better consider his audience and to research the field of human resources in general. I would suggest he start with professional organizations such as SHRM or ASTD; the advice and information on their web sites is far superior to anything in this text.


Hodgepodge of mismatched topics 2000-06-30
Sovereign seems to skip around often in a half-hearted effort at being comprehensive. The cases are not very recent, despite the publication date, and the book has a definite lack of flow. It is almost as if the author threw together several mismatched segments and forgot to edit it for comprehension and cohesiveness.


Adequate on the law; suffers from poor editing 1998-02-27
I have to use this book as the text for a class I teach in Employment Law (i.e., non-collective-bargaining law) to students matriculating to a Master of Science Degree in Human Resources. The text adequately surveys the law, but suffers from terrible proofing and editing; it also needs an update, because the 1994 edition obviously was not written any later than early 1993, based on the omission of certain important U.S. Supreme Court cases from 1994 and since. The book also suffers from an extremely strong pro-management tone; a more balanced approach would serve the untutored reader better. There are better books, such as the ABA Guide, which I commend to potential readers of this book.