Practical Human Resources for Public Managers

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A01=Nicolas A. Valcik
A01=Teodoro J. Benavides
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Administrative Assistant
Antismoking Policy
Assistant City Manager
Author_Nicolas A. Valcik
Author_Teodoro J. Benavides
Budget Analysts
Business Processes
case studies in public human resources
Category=JP
Category=JPP
Category=KJMV2
City Auditor
City Manager
City Manager's Office
City Manager’s Office
Defined Benefit Pension Plan
disciplinary procedures
Employee mentoring
Employees
employment law compliance
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Hostile Work Environment
Human resouces
Human Resource Issues
Job Functions
Job Training Office
Liability
Main Street Manager
Managed Health Care Plans
Mentally ill employees
Mentor Mentee Matches
municipal personnel management
Nonprofit
Nonprofit Organizations
Pension Obligation Bonds
Performance Evaluation Instrument
Performance Evaluations
Physical Agility Tests
public sector HR
Successful Mentoring Program
workforce retention strategies
workplace conflict resolution
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781439841433
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Aug 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Employers face a myriad of issues when hiring: how to recruit, whom to select, how to interview, Equal Employment Opportunity policies, fair salary offerings, health issues, performance evaluations, behavior/disciplinary actions, turnover, and the list goes on and on. Practical Human Resources Management for Public Managers: A Case Study Approach provides insight into human resource trends and demonstrates how complex situations can be successfully managed by public sector practitioners. The authors take us step by step into the "real world" with examples of historical events that compare "What Happened" with "What Could Have Happened" as well as suggested readings for more in-depth analysis and important points to remember.

Exploring the space between theory and what actually occurs in the world, this book supplies instructional case studies based upon actual events. The authors introduce key human resources issues with clear, concise language and provide techniques to address these issues in a real-world setting. The case studies cover legal and liability issues, recruiting and hiring, employee performance, reward and discipline issues, retention, termination, workplace violence, mentorship, motivation, and managing through transitions.

The authors bring know-how from a wide array of working environments, including teaching and administrative experience in public universities and management in municipalities of various population sizes from a few thousand to more than a million. They have also worked in a variety of capacities within these organizations, which allow them to see different perspectives on how different departments handle similar situations. They use their from-the-trenches knowledge to explore pragmatic ways to deal with human resource issues in public sector workplaces.

Dr. Valcik received his Ph.D. in Public Affairs from The University of Texas at Dallas in 2005. He has written municipal risk management policies for the City of McKinney, worked as a university recruiting analyst for Nortel Networks, and taught undergraduate and graduate level courses in human resource management for the Public Affairs program at The University of Texas at Dallas program since 2007. Dr. Valcik has worked as an administrator for The University of Texas at Dallas since 1997 and currently (2011) holds the position of Associate Director at the Office of Strategic Planning and Analysis.

Ted Benavides currently serves as a faculty member for the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) in the School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences' Public Affairs Program. He has worked for the Fire Department of the City of Fort Worth, Texas where he was responsible for the administrative and budget matters. He also served as the City Manager of Denton, Texas where he supervised over a thousand employees. He worked for the City of Dallas, Texas for twenty-four years. He held a variety of professional and managerial positions which included budget analyst, capital budget administrator, assistant budget director, director in the Office of Budget and Research, assistant director of health and human services, assistant city manager and the city manager from 1998 to 2004.

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