Screening Workers: An Examination and Analysis of Practice and Public Policy
Abstract
Every employer, unless he or she has no pool of applicants or potential applicants to choose from, engages in hiring choices. While the hiring process may vary, both from one employer to another and from one job to another, some form of screening occurs. In recent years, students of management have noted the proliferation of screening practices in the hiring process, especially in bringing new technologies such as medical and drug testing procedures. Testing and other screening practices, while wide‐ranging both with respect to their ends and means, have raised consistent patterns of concern among job‐seekers, public policy makers and managers themselves. In this monograph a variety of methods of screening and issues of public policy raised by screening procedures are discussed. An overview of United States law regulating the screening process is provided, together with future directions in the area of screening in the US.
Keywords
Citation
Greenfield, P.A., Karren, R.J. and Zacharias, L.S. (1989), "Screening Workers: An Examination and Analysis of Practice and Public Policy", Employee Relations, Vol. 11 No. 5, pp. 2-47. https://doi.org/10.1108/01425458910134012
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1989, MCB UP Limited