posted on 2023-08-30, 14:56authored byGloria Edwards-Joseph
The following research aims at assessing to what extent Judicial Review has been
transforming the practice of Human Resource Management in the Public Service of Trinidad
and Tobago as it relates to the functions of the Service Commissions and the Service
Commissions Department. With the passage of the Judicial Review Act in 2000 and the
removal of the ‘ouster clause’ which permitted public officers to challenge the decisions of
Service Commissions, there has been a preponderance of Judicial Review applications by
public officers who are aggrieved with the Commissions’ decisions. Further, there is a
general perception that the Judicial Review judgements in this regard have been impacting on
Public Service Human Resource Management. This research examines the judgements of the
Courts of Trinidad and Tobago and the Privy Council of London over the period 2000-2015
to determine whether there is any veracity in this perception.
The research was conducted utilizing qualitative methodologies in that a phenomenological
approach was adopted. This permitted the use of a case study, interviews and purposive
sampling of Human Resource Management practitioners, senior officials, members of the
Service Commissions and legal officers who have a rich knowledge of the subject. Other
methods employed in the research were, Hermeneutics due to the legal aspect of some parts
of the research that aided in the narratives contained in the texts of the judgements. Grounded
theory permitted the building of theories and a hypothesis that were germane to the research.
The research shows that Judicial Review has been transforming the practice of Human
Resource Management in the Public Service due to its legislative framework which has its
genesis in Public Law and which governs the practice. Further, it reveals that the Court is
playing a critical role in Public Service Human Resource Management due to its inherent
supervisory jurisdiction. The research also enunciates that Public Service Human Resource
Management is underpinned by Public Law and that a good understanding of Public Law is
critical to the practice of Human Resource Management in the Public Service.
The research argues that universal prescriptive Human Resource Management models cannot
guide Human Resource Management practices in the Public Service due to its restrictive legal
framework. Finally, a model has been designed, which is underpinned by Public Law, for the
practice of Public Service Human Resource Management. It is advocated that this model is a
template for Strategic/ Contemporary Public Service Human Resource Management. The use
of this model should lessen the number of Judicial Review applications by public officers and
should contribute to good Human Resource Management and by extension, good Public
Administration.