Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/63324
Title: Workplace Employment Relations Survey: 1998-2011: Secure Access
Keywords: TURNOVER
ASSETS
BUILDINGS
PURCHASING
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
RENTS
CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFITS
ADMINISTRATIVE AREAS
COMMUTING
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS PROCEDURES
INFORMATION TRANSFER
ACCOUNTANTS
ADMINISTRATION
ADVICE
AGE
ATTITUDE CHANGE
ATTITUDES
BONUS PAYMENTS
BUSINESS FORMATION
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
CHILD CARE
CLOSED SHOP AGREEMENTS
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
COMMITTEES
COMMUNICATION PROCESS
COMPUTER TECHNIQUES
CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CONTRACTS AND AGREEMENTS
COSTS
CUSTOMERS
DAY NURSERIES
DEBILITATIVE ILLNESS
DECISION MAKING
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
ECONOMIC COMPETITION
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
EMPLOYER-SPONSORED TRAINING
EMPLOYERS' ORGANIZATIONS
EMPLOYMENT SERVICES
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
ETHNIC GROUPS
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
FRANCHISES (BUSINESS)
GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS
GOVERNMENT POLICY
GROUPS
HOME-BASED WORK
IN-SERVICE TRAINING
INCENTIVES
INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES
INDUSTRIAL INJURIES
INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNALS
INFORMATION SOURCES
JOB CHARACTERISTICS
JOB DESCRIPTION
JOB REQUIREMENTS
JOB SATISFACTION
JOB VACANCIES
LABOUR DISPUTES
LABOUR ECONOMICS
LABOUR FORCE
LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOUR SUPPLY
LAWYERS
LEGISLATION
MANAGEMENT OPERATIONS
MANAGERS
MARKET STRUCTURE
MARKETS (ECONOMICS)
MEN
MUSCULOSKELETAL DISEASES
OBJECTIVES
OCCUPATIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
ACCOUNTS
APPOINTMENT TO JOB
BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATION STUDIES
BUSINESS RECORDS
BUSINESSES
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
CHILDREN
CHRONIC ILLNESS
COLLECTIVE AGREEMENTS
MIXED RACE
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
COMPANIES
CONSUMER GOODS
DEVELOPMENT
DISABILITIES
DISCIPLINE
DISCRIMINATION
DISMISSAL
DISSEMINATION OF INFORMATION
ECONOMIC VALUE
EMPLOYEES
EMPLOYERS
EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
EUROPEAN UNION
FRINGE BENEFITS
FULL-TIME EMPLOYMENT
GENDER
HUMAN RESOURCES
ARBITRATION
CONCILIATION
INDUSTRIES
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INVOLUNTARY SHORT TIME WORKING
JOB EVALUATION
JOB SECURITY
JOB SHARING
LABOUR RELATIONS
LEAVE
MARITAL STATUS
MEETINGS
MEMBERSHIP
MERGERS
MINORITY GROUPS
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES
OCCUPATIONAL STATUS
ORGANIZATIONS
OVERTIME
PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT
PATERNITY LEAVE
PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
PERSONNEL RECORDS
PERSONNEL SELECTION
PICKETING
SOCIAL POLICY
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATIZATION
PROBLEM SOLVING
PRODUCTS
PROFIT SHARING
PUBLIC SECTOR
QUALIFICATIONS
QUALITY
QUALITY CONTROL
RECRUITMENT
REPORTS
REWARDS
ROLE CHANGE
SELF-EMPLOYED
SHARES
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY
OCCUPATIONS
PERFORMANCE
LOBBYING
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS
RATES OF PAY
REDUNDANCY
RESISTANCE TO CHANGE
RESPIRATORY TRACT DISEASES
SICK LEAVE
SKIN DISEASES
SMALL BUSINESSES
STANDARDS
STRATEGIES
STRIKES
SUPERVISION
INNOVATION
TOP MANAGEMENT
TRADE ASSOCIATIONS
TRADE UNION MEMBERSHIP
TRADE UNION RIGHTS
TRAINING
TRAINING COURSES
TRANSNATIONAL ENTERPRISES
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION CERTIFICATES
VOTING
WAGE DEMANDS
WAGE INCREASES
WAGES
WOMEN
WORK ATTITUDE
WORKERS PARTICIPATION
WORKERS' RIGHTS
WORKING CONDITIONS
SHIFT WORK
SPECIALISTS
STRESS (PSYCHOLOGICAL)
SUBCONTRACTING
SUBSCRIPTIONS
SUBSIDIES
SUNDAY WORKING
SUPERVISORS
SURVEYS
TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT
TERMINATION OF SERVICE
TRADE UNION OFFICIALS
TRADE UNIONS
WAGE DETERMINATION
WOMEN'S EMPLOYMENT
HOURS OF WORK
WORKS COUNCILS
BUSINESS OWNERSHIP
1998-2011
Great Britain
Description: <P>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</P>
The <i>Workplace Employment Relations Survey</i> (WERS) is a national survey of the state of employment relations and working life inside British workplaces. The 1998, 2004 and 2011 surveys (WERS98, WERS 2004, WERS 2011) are the fourth, fifth and sixth in the series, respectively, earlier surveys having been carried out in 1980, 1984 and 1990. Prior to 1998, the series was known as the Workplace Industrial Relations Survey (WIRS), the name being changed in order to better reflect the content of the current survey. The UK Data Archive hold the WIRS/WERS series from 1980 onwards under GN 33176.<br> <br> The purpose of each survey in the WERS series has been to provide large-scale, statistically reliable evidence about a broad range of industrial relations and employment practices across almost every sector of the economy in Great Britain. This evidence is collected with several objectives in mind. It aims to provide a mapping of employment relations practices in workplaces across Great Britain, monitor changes in those practices over time, inform policy development and permit an informed assessment of the effects of public policy, and bring about a greater understanding of employment relations as well as of the labour market.<br> <br> To that end, the cross-section element of WERS98 and WERS 2004 collected information from managers with responsibility for employment relations or personnel matters; trade union or employee representatives; and employees themselves. Thus, the surveys included the Cross-Section Survey of Managers (MQ), the Cross-Section Survey of Employee Representatives (ERQ), and the Cross-Section Survey of Employees (SEQ). The cross-section surveys in 2004 also included a Financial Performance Questionnaire (FPQ), which examined financial performance of the establishment over the 12 months previous to the survey. (Access to the FPQ data, alongside region identifiers and industry codes for the MQ and panel data, was initially restricted until April 2007, when they were deposited as part of the second edition of End User Licence (EUL) SN 5294.) The panel element of WERS 2004 includes the Screening Questionnaire and the Survey of Managers (comprising the Basic Workforce Data Sheet and the Management Interview).<br> <br> The 2011 WERS sample consisted of a panel sample containing all the workplaces that had taken part in the 2004 WERS and were still in existence in 2011, and a stratified random sample of establishments drawn from the Inter-Departmental Business Register (IDBR) in August 2010 (the fresh cross-section sample). The key design innovation of the 2011 WERS was the integration of the two elements so that workplaces in the panel sample were eligible for all four components of WERS 2011. Weights were devised to enable the panel sample to be combined with the fresh sample to form a combined cross-sectionally representative sample. The WERS 2011 has four components: a Survey of Managers comprising the Employee Profile Questionnaire (EPQ) and the Management Questionnaire (MQ); a Survey of Worker Representatives (WRQ); a Survey of Employees (SEQ); and a Financial Performance Questionnaire (FPQ) which detailed the financial performance of trading sector establishments in the 12 months before the survey. <br> <br> <b>Secure Access Dataset:</b><br> The Secure Access version of the study includes both the cross-section and panel surveys conducted for WERS98 and WERS 2004. The panel element for 2004 forms Wave 2 of the 1998-2004 panel survey. Wave 1 comprised the cross-sectional managers' survey conducted for WERS98. The study also includes all the WERS 2011 data<br> <br> The Secure Access version includes additional variables not included in the EUL versions (see SNs 5294, 3955 and 7226). Extra variables that can be found in the Secure Access versions but not in the EUL versions relate to 1) Inter-Departmental Business Register reference numbers for businesses who have consented to the linking of WERS data to other data sources, 2) postcodes, and 3) in 2011 the Financial Performance Questionnaire data are available along with some other more detailed variables.<br> <br> <i>Geographical references: postcodes</i><br> The postcodes available in the 1998 data are pseudo-anonymised postcodes. The real postcodes were not available for this year due to the potential risk of identification of the observations. However, these replacement postcodes retain the inherent nested characteristics of real postcodes, and will allow researchers to aggregate observations to other geographic units, e.g. wards, super output areas, etc. The postcodes available in the 2004 and 2011 data are real postcodes. <br> <br> <i>Linking to other business studies</i><br> These data contain Inter-Departmental Business Register reference numbers. These are anonymous but unique reference numbers assigned to business organisations. Their inclusion allows researchers to combine different business survey sources together. Researchers may consider applying for other business data to assist their research.<br> <br> <i>Additional data in 2011</i><br> The 2011 data includes an additional dataset, the Financial Performance Questionnaire, which details the financial performance of trading sector establishments in the 12 months before the survey. There are also region identifiers and the country in which the workplace is located can be identified. In addition industry classification is coded to below the section-level of the Standard Industrial Classification.<br> <br> <b>Related UK Data Archive studies</b>:<br> The EUL version of the WERS Cross-Section Survey, 2004 and Panel Survey, 1998-2004; Wave 2 study is held under SN 5294. The EUL version of the WERS Cross-Section Survey 1998 is held under SN 3955. The EUL version of the WERS 2011 is held under SN 7226. Further details and links to these and other WERS studies available under a standard EUL can be found on the <a href="http://discover.ukdataservice.ac.uk/series/?sn=2000058" title = "Workplace Employee Relations Survey list of datasets">Workplace Employee Relations Survey list of datasets</a> webpage.<br> <br> <b>Related Websites</b>:<br> The WERS sponsors have established the <a href="http://www.wers2011.info/" title="2011 Workplace Employment Relations Study: Information and Advice">2011 Workplace Employment Relations Study: Information and Advice</a> user support website for users of the WERS 2011 data. The site includes provision for users to contact the WERS research team with queries about the data. <br> <br> Further information about the WERS series is also provided on the gov.uk <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/workplace-employment-relations-study-wers" title="Workplace Employment Relations Study (WERS)">Workplace Employment Relations Study (WERS)</a> webpage.<br> <br> <b>Latest edition:</b><br> For the fifth edition (August 2018), the pseudo-anonymised postcodes (NEW_PC) included in the data file 'wers2004_management_idbr_restricted' have been replaced with real postcodes (PCD2). The file contains only those cases where the respondent gave consent for data linkage (MLINKDAT=yes). <br> <br>
<B>Main Topics</B>:<BR>
Survey questions are similar but vary somewhat between years. The Cross-Section Survey of Managers across the various years has included questions on workplace characteristics, recruitment and training, consultation and communication, employee representation, pay determination and payment systems, grievance and discipline, collective disputes and procedures, equal opportunities, work-life balance, health and safety, workforce flexibility, establishment performance, workplace change, experience of the recession, and attitudes to work.<br> <br> The Cross-Section Survey of Employee Representatives contains questions on structure of representation at the workplace, time spent on representative duties, means of communication with employees, incidence of negotiation and consultation over pay and other matters, involvement in redundancies, discipline and grievance matters, incidence of collective disputes and industrial action, relations with managers, and union recruitment.<br> <br> The Cross-Section Survey of Employees contains questions on working hours, job influence, job satisfaction, working arrangements, training and skills, information and consultation, employee representation, and pay.<br> <br> The questionnaire used in Wave 2 of the 1998-2004 panel survey is based on the WERS98 cross-section management questionnaire, but is much shorter and collects less detailed information about particular practices. It contains around one third of the questions that were present in the WERS98 questionnaire. The topics covered in Wave 2 include recruitment and training, consultation and communication, employee representation, pay determination and payment systems, equal opportunities, work-life balance, health and safety, flexibility and establishment performance.<br> <br>
URI: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/63324
Other Identifiers: 6712
10.5255/UKDA-SN-6712-5
http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6712-5
Appears in Collections:Cessda

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