Across the counter : socially irresponsible human resource management in UK & Ireland betting firms
Abstract
Socially (ir)responsible human resource management (SIHRM) is an area of growing
interest to researchers and practitioners. However, SIHRM is in its infancy, indicating
a range of research gaps. The gap that this research fills considers how in certain
industries employers appear historically irresponsible toward their frontline employees.
Specifically, this thesis investigates the work environment experiences of front-line
staff within the retail betting industry, a sector rarely examined more widely across
HRM research.
This research investigates corporate rhetoric of betting firms and staff experiences
working within front-line betting firms, which aims to provide a nuanced understanding
of what it is like to work within the gambling industry in a customer-facing role. Drawing
on gender at work and feminist theory of violence against women this thesis
progresses the SIHRM framework by providing a gendered scope by utilising the
experiences of betting shop staff as an industry example of SIHRM practices. This
research investigates how gender at work and feminist theory of violence against
women can be used to analyse and critique the work environment experiences of frontline staff within the retail betting industry, a sector rarely examined more widely across
HRM research.
This research adopts a mixed method approach, using semi-structured interviews with
22 front-line staff and 292 staff completing a short survey from five different betting
firms in the UK. The data was analysed using thematic analysis, guided by the SIHRM
framework and the gender at work theory.
Building on the work of Richards & Sang (2019) this research contributes to the
existing counter-philosophy of SIHRM. The analysis demonstrates how betting firms
are socially irresponsible employers, and adds a gendered consideration to SIHRM
philosophy. Moreover, this thesis contributes to extending theories related to gender
and aggression, and providing a timely, unique and rare empirical accounts of betting
shop work.
The main findings of this thesis reveal that betting shop staff experience various forms
of customer misbehaviour and violence, which are influenced by gender dynamics and
the nature of the gambling industry. The thesis also shows that betting firms fail to protect and support their staff adequately, and often engage in practices that contradict
their own policies and regulations. The thesis concludes that betting firms are socially
irresponsible employers, and that SIHRM can be used as a framework to analyse and
critique their practices from a gendered perspective. The thesis also offers some
recommendations for improving the working conditions and well-being of betting shop
staff, as well as for advancing the SIHRM literature.