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Transparent Peer Review By Scholar9

Industrial Relations at Enterprise Level: A Case Study

Abstract

Industrial relations in India have witnessed a long journey, from the phase of industrialisation to independence era to the age of economic reforms, but a lot needs to be addressed given the role of cordial industrial relations in desired economic growth of a country. The key lies in recognition of workforce as an essential and integral part of the organisation and not merely a tool for the production. The second National commission on labour recommended consolidation of labour laws, given that there are numerous labour laws both at the state level and the central level. Most of the labour laws are applicable to organisations employing a given number of workers, mostly ten or more workers. In order to escape the laws, organisations have been using contract labour more, so as to avoid the constraints of hiring and firing in adjusting to production demands. This study concentrates upon how the broad structure of specific patterns of industrial relations operates in a given context, and thereby provide an insight for solving a number of emerging problems. It helps to locate where the problem is, which may require modifications in the structural patterns. This provides an objective analysis to which those responsible for managing industrial relations in industry can relate their own experiences and can help them to seek avenues of change in realising their industrial relations objectives.

Jagbir Kaur Reviewer

badge Review Request Accepted

Jagbir Kaur Reviewer

19 Nov 2025 02:41 PM

badge Approved

Relevance and Originality

Methodology

Validity & Reliability

Clarity and Structure

Results and Analysis

Relevance & Originality

The manuscript addresses an important and enduring issue in the Indian industrial landscape—employee–management relations at the enterprise level. The focus on a real manufacturing unit makes the topic practical and relatable. However, the work relies heavily on established IR narratives, and the originality is limited. The study would contribute more strongly if it clearly identified what is novel about this organisation’s dynamics and how the findings extend or challenge existing industrial relations literature.

Methodology

The study attempts a comprehensive approach by combining archival review, structured schedules, interviews, and a workforce attitude survey. While this mixed approach is suitable for a case study, the methodological explanation lacks precision. The rationale behind the sampling frame, distribution of respondents across groups, and justification for the total sample size is missing. Statistical tools are listed, but the connection between each hypothesis and the corresponding test results is not consistently articulated. More detail on instrument development and data collection procedures would strengthen the methodological transparency.

Validity & Reliability

Although multiple statistical methods are applied, the manuscript does not discuss the reliability of the survey instrument. There is no mention of internal consistency checks, pre-testing, or validation methods. Several findings depend heavily on employees’ perceptions, but potential sources of bias—such as fear of reprisal, social desirability, or differences in literacy levels—are not considered. Without these safeguards, the validity of the conclusions is somewhat limited, and the reliability of the data cannot be fully confirmed.

Clarity & Structure

The paper presents extensive information, but the structure could be clearer. Background details occupy a large portion of the introduction, reducing focus on the actual research problem. The results section is table-heavy and difficult to interpret due to formatting and inconsistent layout. Analytical explanations often blend into long paragraphs, which obscures key insights. The discussion section introduces anecdotal observations that need better linkage to empirical data. A more organized flow—clear separation between results, interpretation, and implications—would significantly improve readability.

Results & Analysis

The results include detailed numerical data from different employee categories, yet the analysis remains largely descriptive. Statistical findings are mentioned, but without a deeper interpretation of their meaning or impact. The narrative tends to restate values from tables rather than extract trends or explain the significance of differences between groups. The blend of empirical findings and anecdotal commentary weakens analytical consistency. A more focused integration of statistical results with industrial relations theory would make the analysis more robust.

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IJ Publication Publisher

The editorial team thanks you for your constructive review and the clarity of your recommendations. Your input has been extremely helpful to our decision-making process and to the improvement of the manuscript. We appreciate your continued collaboration with our journal.

Publisher

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IJ Publication

Reviewer

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Jagbir Kaur

More Detail

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Paper Category

Business Management Studies

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Journal Name

JETIR - Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research

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p-ISSN

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e-ISSN

2349-5162

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