I’m a Professor of International Human Resource Management and an Academic Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD).
Over the last 20 years, my work has focused on culture and human resource management with special emphasis on flexibility, diversity, equal opportunities and social inclusion.
My research is recognised for its contribution to the contemporary understanding of people management in different cultures and the efficient use of flexible working practices, equal opportunities in relation to gender and age, employment initiatives, and employment prospects for young people leaving third level education.
I have conducted research and consultancy work in the following areas:
• Human resource management
• Cross-cultural management
• Graduate recruitment and labour market trends
• Environmental awareness in the workplace
• Job creation and social inclusion
• The response of employees to organizational change
To date, I have published two books, over 60 research papers – many of which I have presented at national and international conferences - and examined more than 50 PhD and MPhil students.
I am a guest lecturer at universities in the UK and abroad including the University of British Colombia and the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing.
Professor Branine has made extensive contribution to teaching, learning, assessment and course preparation at undergraduate and postgraduate levels as well as the supervision of research students at Masters and Doctoral levels. He has excellent record of good teaching performance in respect of his own specialist course units and has demonstrated a sustained capacity for leadership in curriculum development and facilitating student learning. He has also examined undergraduate and postgraduate degree courses at a number of universities in the UK and abroad. His current teaching subjects include:
Professor Branine has conducted research and consultancy work in the areas of:
He has written two books and more than 60 research papers and refereed journal articles and presented more than 50 papers at national and international conferences.
Professor Branine's work and contribution has been recognized by many. For example he:
Professor Mohamed Branine has made significant contribution to knowledge in theory and practice over the last 20 years through teaching, research and consultancy. His work has focussed on job creation for and employability of women with family commitments, the unemployed and the newly graduated students. This focus has contributed to the understanding and efficient utilization of flexible working practices such as job sharing and part-time work, equal opportunities in relation to gender and age, employment initiatives for the unemployed, and employment prospects of young people leaving further and higher education. This research has had national and European wide impact on policy and decision makers. For example, in response to the coalition government report on allowing new fathers to take up to ten months of paid paternity leave, the Scotsman Newspaper quoted an interview with Prof. Branine as follows:
"Professor Mohamed Branine, an expert in international human resource management at the University of Abertay Dundee, said employees and employers must think carefully about where to draw the line between personal and professional priorities.
He said: "This report is an important warning, particularly given that current economic pressures and uncertainty over jobs are resulting in many people working longer hours. The key to a solution, however, is for people to work more effectively rather than work longer and harder.
"New technologies have played a factor in people working longer hours, with e-mail instantly accessible from mobile phones, but technology also plays an important role in increasing productivity.
"Management and employees should look at how they can effectively use new technology to manage and reduce their workloads, not continually overburden themselves."
He added: "The ideal solution is not job-sharing, but work- sharing. Instead of a single role being done by two or more people, is it possible for an eight-hour day to be reduced to a six-hour day? Can three people work as a team to meet all the demands of two positions? Smaller adjustments like this and smarter working are the answer."
Professor Branine was also invited by the Council of Europe to attend the first meeting to launch a project on 'Quality job creation through community support' held in Strasbourg on 15th and 16th June 2010, and to the second meeting on 4th and 5th October 2010 to advise on the production of a policy document for the European Commission. The project “Quality job creation through community support” set out to:
Based on his earlier publications on Job sharing, Professor Branine was asked to contribute to the development of methods of sharing work among those who are extremely busy and would like to reduce their working hours and those who have the same basic qualifications but cannot find a job owing to lack of experience and on how work-sharing can be systematically organized in an individual enterprise by reducing working hours for each employee in order to retain all the jobs in the company and thus prevent mass redundancies.