

Author: Bakuwa Rhoda Mamman Aminu
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 1466-4399
Source: International Journal of Human Resource Management, Vol.23, Iss.14, 2012-07, pp. : 2917-2937
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Abstract
Private sector companies have a role to play in addressing HIV/AIDS in Africa. This is because the epidemic has a disproportionate effect on the most productive segment of the workforce. However, in Africa many companies are yet to acknowledge and respond to HIV/AIDS as workplace issue. Therefore, there is a merit in a systematic investigation of why some companies are reluctant to adopt a formal HIV/AIDS workplace policy. This paper sought to fill this gap in the literature. Using a random sample of 152 private companies in Malawi, the paper investigated managerial perspective on the internal and external variables that relate to the non-adoption of HIV/AIDS workplace policy. The findings revealed that internal factors rather than external variables provide better explanatory power as to why some organizations do not adopt the policy. The implications of the findings have been discussed within the context of
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