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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

A Multilevel Examination of Cultural Moderators of the Job Demands-Resources Model

Jang, Seulki 01 January 2015 (has links)
Although the Job Demands-Resources Model (JD-R) is the dominant theoretical framework used to understand the relationship between workplace factors and employee well-being, the cross-cultural generalizability of this model has seldom been directly tested. Therefore, this study examined whether and to what extent relationships between: 1) job demands (i.e., organizational constraints) and strain (i.e., job satisfaction, and turnover intentions) and 2) job resources (i.e., job control, participation in decision-making, direct supervisor support, senior leader support, and clear goals and performance feedback) and strain were moderated by cultural dimensions (i.e., individualism-collectivism and uncertainty avoidance). Survey data from workers in 28 countries were used to examine these questions. Results revealed that culture-level individualism-collectivism and uncertainty avoidance independently and significantly moderated some job demands-strain and job resources-strain outcomes relationships. Specifically, job control and senior leaders support was consistently and more strongly, negatively related to strain in more individualistic cultures, and participation in decision-making was more strongly, negatively related to strain in more collectivistic cultures when using cultural scores from both Hofstede and GLOBE taxonomies. In contrast, although I also uncovered some significant moderating effects of culture-level uncertainty avoidance on job demands-strain and job resources-strain relationships, the results from these analyses were often in the opposite pattern when GLOBE versus Hofstede cultural scores were used. Overall, the present study sheds light on the generalizability versus specificity of the JD-R model across cultural contexts.
102

Trust issues : Welfare workers' relationship to their organisation

Welander, Jonas January 2017 (has links)
In the past decades, the public sector has undergone important organisational policy changes, referred to as New Public Management. These management strategies focus on continuous cost improvements and rationalisation of operations. In the aftermath of these policy changes, we have seen reports of increased work demands and less professional autonomy amongst welfare workers. Against this background, the thesis sets out to explore welfare workers’ relationship to their organisation. This was done by investigating how psychosocial and organisational factors related to a number of outcomes assumed to be indicators of the quality of the relationship. Theoretically, the thesis was inspired by psychological contract theory, but also relates to other concepts and theories found in organisational research. The thesis is based on four empirical studies, all of which relate to how welfare workers have perceived their relationship to their organisation. Study I aimed to qualitatively investigate how turnover processes evolved amongst statutory social workers who voluntarily had resigned from their jobs. The results showed that dismissive/admonishing organisational responses to the social workers’ perceived work-related dissatisfactions reinforced their beliefs in psychological contract violation, which led to resignation. Study II and III employed national web-based questionnaire data collected from employees and managers in the social services. The results of Studies II-III showed that if organisations want welfare workers to stop considering exit, want to counteract silence, want to reduce stress-related ill health and want to improve organisational commitment and job satisfaction, management strategies need to be developed that lead to fewer conflicting demands, a reasonable workload and a greater professional autonomy. The results also showed that the organisation’s open climate and attitude towards employees was of great importance for the studied outcome variables. Study IV was based on questionnaire data from different occupational groups in two municipal organisations. The results showed that organisational resources explained additional variance in organisational identification and organisational pride, beyond the contributions of workgroup resources. From the findings of this thesis, it can be concluded that the psychosocial demands need to be balanced with organisational resources in order to (re)build a trustworthy employee-organisation relationship. Further, organisations need to reconsider their human resource management strategies and practices, e.g., by enabling a continuous and open dialogue between the strategic and operational levels. Such changes may lead to balanced psychological contracts between welfare workers and the organisation that can improve the organisation’s stability, continuity and, ultimately, the quality of the welfare services.
103

Att arbeta under en pandemi -så påverkade Covid-19 distriktssköterskans arbetsmiljö : En kvalitativ intervjustudie / Working during a pandemic -that's how Covid-19 affected the district nurse's work environment : A qualitative interview study

Eklund, Josefin, Idermark, Stina January 2021 (has links)
Bakgrund: Den 11 mars 2020 bekräftade World Health Organisation att världen drabbats av en pandemi. Tidigare forskning visade att distriktssköterskan ställdes inför en utmaning genom nya riktlinjer dagligen och omorganisationer av arbetsuppgifter med en ökad arbetsbelastning som följd. Syfte: Syftet med studien var att beskriva distriktssköterskans upplevelser av arbetskrav och resurser under Covid-19 pandemin inom primärvården. Metod: Kvalitativ design med induktiv ansats valdes som metod. Semistrukturerade intervjuer låg till grund för datainsamlingen. Tio distriktssköterskor som var verksamma inom primärvården Region sydöstra Sverige intervjuades. Insamlade data analyserades via kvalitativ innehållsanalys. Resultat: Resultatet mynnade ut i ett tema: ”En tillvaro präglad av konstant förändring och att befinna sig i ett sammanhang” och två huvudkategorier: ”Stress, otrygghet och osäkerhet när arbetet blir oförutsägbart” samt ”stabilitet och trygghet med inre och yttre resurser för att hitta nya lösningar”. De väsentligaste fynden av arbetskrav som framkom i studien var osäkerheten och otryggheten som uppstod på grund av ovissa och oförutsägbara förändringar som Covid-19 innebar. Resurserna fanns i den stabilitet som stöd av kollegor, ledning och inre personliga resurser gav för att ta sig vidare. Detta bidrog till en känsla av trygghet och stabilitet i arbetsmiljön, trots ovisshet och oförutsägbarhet. Slutsats: Chefer inom Region Kalmar måste ta ett övergripande ansvar för distriktssköterskans arbetsmiljö när distriktssköterskan ställs inför extraordinära händelser som en pandemi. Pandemier skapar stress, otrygghet och en känsla av att tappa kontrollen, där ett aktivt och tydligt ledarskap hjälper distriktssköterskan till en trygg och stabil arbetsmiljö. / Background: On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared a world pandemic. Previous research showed that the district nurse was faced with challenges through new daily guidelines and reorganizations of tasks with an increased workload as a result.  Purpose: The purpose of the study is to describe the district nurse's experiences of work requirements and resources during the Covid-19 pandemic in primary care.  Method: The method was qualitative with inductive approach. Semi-structured interviews formed the basis for the data collection. Ten district nurses active in the Primary Care Region in south-eastern Sweden were interviewed. Collected data were analyzed in a qualitative content analysis.  Results: Resulted in a theme: "A life characterized by constant change and being in a context" and two main categories: “Stress, insecurity and uncertainty when work becomes unpredictable and stability” and “security with internal and external resources to find new solutions”. The most significant findings of work requirements that emerged in the study were the uncertainty and insecurity that arose due to uncertain and unpredictable changes that Covid-19 entailed. The resources were in the stability that support from colleagues, management and internal personal resources provided to move forward. This contributed to a feeling of security and stability in the work environment, despite uncertainty and unpredictability.  Conclusion: Managers within Regions must take overall responsibility for the district nurses work environment when district nurses are faced with extraordinary events such as a pandemic. Pandemics create stress, insecurity and a feeling of losing control, where active and clear leadership helps the district nurse to a safe and stable work environment.
104

Job demands and job resources as predictors of dispositional employability of academics in South Africa

Roodt, Estee 06 March 2013 (has links)
Background and Aim The South African higher education sector has undergone numerous changes over the past years due to external factors such as globalisation, managerialism and neo-liberalism (Ntshoe, Higgs, Higgs&Wolhuter, 2008). Furthermore De Villiers and Steyn (2009) add that state funding of higher education in South Africa has been decreased to such an extent that higher education institutions (HEI’s) have been unable to parallel the increase in the number of students enrolled per year. As mentioned by Mouton (2010) universities in sub-Saharan Africa continue to operate under conditions which are seriously under-resourced, which poses significant challenges for the scholars concerned. The changes in the Higher Education Institutional environment have forced HEI’s to increase their level of output in terms of: enrollments, qualifications awarded, research output and institution size and number of disadvantaged students (De Villiers&Steyn, 2009) in order to remain competitive. The number of changes in performance outputs as well as the growing market for competitive higher education (HE) has greatly impacted the job demands of academics in South Africa. The environment in which academics in South Africa function now demands more of them than in previous years. For example the employment relationship has changed (i.e. teacher-driven to student-driven), altering the type of work that people do, when they work and how much they do (Barkhuizen, Rothmann&Van de Vijver, in press). Accordingly, it appears that the job demands of academics have escalated, whilst the levels of support and other resources have declined. The objective of this study was to investigate whether job demands and resources are significant predictors of dispositional employability of academics in South Africa. Method A cross–sectional research design was followed. The Job Characteristics Scale developed by Barkhuizen and Rothman (2005) and the Dispositional Measure of Employability (Fugate&Kinicki, 2008) were used as measures in this study. A total of 360 questionnaires were sent out to the sample, of which 158 completed questionnaires were received, but only 146 of these responses could be used for data analyses. This represents a 40.55% response rate. Results The results showed that there is a significant relationship between job demands and the change identity of the academics and that job demands do act as a predictor of the dispositional employability of academics in terms of their change identity. No significant relationship between the job resources and the dispositional employability of the academics were found, however all of the dimensions of DE had a positive relationship with job resources. A significant relationship between job demands and the ethnicity, home language, age, the respondent’s job level and the number of hours they work was found. However, no statistically significant differences were found within gender, qualifications, job categories, years in service and the number of years in current positions. According to the results the white ethnic group experiences higher job demands than the black ethic group. Furthermore respondents speaking either Afrikaans or English experience higher job demands then respondents speaking indigenous languages. In relation to this, the age group 50 to 59 experience higher job demands compared to that of the age group 20-29. Associate professors experience higher job demands than junior lecturers. No significant relationship between the academics’ perception of their job resources and their demographic characteristics was found. There are significant differences between the DE of the academics and their ethnicity, home language, job category, years in service and hours of work. No statistically significant differences were found within gender, age, qualifications, job level or years in the current position. The Black ethnic group indicates higher levels of resilience and motivation compared to the other ethnic groups, and indigenous languages have higher levels of resilience compared to the other two language groups. Academics that function as both researchers and lecturers have higher levels of career proactivity compared to the academics that function only as a researcher or lecturer. Respondents that have been in the industry for between zero to 10 years have a higher level of resilience compared to the respondents who have served for longer. The working hours of group four (between 31 to 40 hours) show higher levels of resilience compared to the other groups. / Dissertation (MCom)--University of Pretoria, 2012. / Human Resource Management
105

An experience sampling study of hotel employees' subjective well-being: The job demands-resources approach

Xiaolin Shi (8797526) 05 May 2020 (has links)
<div>To capture the dynamic nature of frontline employees’ subjective well-being (SWB) and turnover intention in the hotel industry, this study used Affective Events Theory (Weiss & Cropanzano, 1996) and the unfolding model of employee voluntary turnover (Lee & Mitchell, 1994) to argue the short-term variability in SWB and turnover intention. Using the job demandsresources model (JD-R model) as the framework, this study examined the role of daily job</div><div>demands (challenge stressors, hindrance stressors, and emotional dissonance) and the role of daily job resources (supervisor support, coworker support, and job autonomy). Given that hotel employees work with different supervisors and co-workers and face various guest situations during each shift, these employees may face high work stress and workload. Furthermore, employees in this industry are often requested to perform non-routine tasks. Therefore, their work is highly associated with high job demands and resource variability. Moreover, the study results stress the importance of the moderating role of day-level job resources and the multilevel moderating effects of employees’ individual levels of resilience and self-efficacy. </div><div>The design of the study employed an experience sampling method. Participants were employees who are in guest-facing positions from food & beverage and front office departments in full-service or luxury hotels in the United States. Sixty-five participants completed a one-time baseline survey and a daily diary study twice per day for at least five working days, resulting in a total of 416 day-level observations. The data structure is day nested within each person. The multi-level data was analyzed by using multilevel linear modeling. </div><div>In summary, this study shows that SWB and turnover intention may not always be stable phenomena among hotel employees due to the daily influences of job demands and job resources. In addition, both personal resources and daily job resources were found to mitigate the negative daily influences of job demands. This study helps managers to better understand employees’ feelings on a daily basis and apply strategies for daily management of employee SWB and turnover intention.</div>
106

An investigation into the moderating role of psychological safety on the relationship between job demands and job resources and intention to quit

Domela- Serobanyane, Malinda 16 March 2022 (has links)
Background Employee turnover has been a major concern for organisations as far as a global competitive advantage is concerned. Amongst the proximal antecedents of turnover, intention to quit has been determined to exhibit the feelings and perceptions of employees concerning alternatives for the possibility of quitting the current employment relationship. Globally, an increasing portion of employees experiences some form of work overload, emotional and technological demands at the workplace, consequential in the feelings of being vulnerable and insecure. The current study, therefore, investigated the moderating role of pf psychological safety in the relationship between job demands, job resources, and intention to quit. The rationale for the research study Knowledge as to whether job demand and job resources have implications for employee retention will make it possible for practitioners to devise strategies to ensure that employees' level of intention to quit is reduced. For instance, to ensure that job demands are managed to prevent emotional and physical drain and consequently intention to quit. To ensure that employees are offered access in terms of resources to improve their motivation, and thereby reduce the intention to quit. Moreover, knowledge and consideration of the moderating effect of psychological safety on the relationship between job demands and job resources will allow managers to enhance retention strategies and thus provide assurance for higher organisational productivity. Aim of the study The current research study was an exploratory attempt to investigate the moderating effect of psychological safety on the relationship between job demands, job resources, and intention to quit. Whereas the existing literature on conservation resources theory provides valuable frameworks for understanding intention to quit, few researchers have investigated how the intention to quit may be influenced by job demands and job resources, through the mediating effect of psychological safety. Research Design, Sampling, and realised sample The cross-sectional study was used in the current research study as a quantitative approach through descriptive statistics to measure the relationship between intention to quit, job demands, and resources, and this associated being moderated by psychological safety. In other words, by applying descriptive statistics, the cross-section design was used in the current study to enable a detailed analysis of the variables in a systematic and standardised manner (ZangirolamiRaimundo, Echeimberg, &amp; Leone, 2018). This research implemented a structured questionnaire method to get primary data. In other words, the respondents were asked to respond to similar questions in a prearranged manner (Doyle, 2009). A realised sample of n= 114 from the central banking environment was obtained using a convenience sampling approach. Statistical analyses To statistically analyse data, the Statistical Package for the Social Science (SPSS) programme was used. Exploratory Factor Analysis discovered common factors among the items; factor analysis was used to identify common variances. Through direct extraction and rotation methods to improve the interpretation of the factor loadings to reduce ambiguities in the initial analysis. The reliability and validity of the intention to quit, job demands-resources, and psychological safety were assessed through coefficient alpha and factor analysis. In other words, in evaluating the results, the test of reliability data was conducted to determine the Cronbach alpha, which would be acceptable when found to be at a minimum of 0.7 (Taber, 2018). Descriptive and correlational designs were used to provide analysis of data. First to classify and summarise data, and secondly to determine and test for the relationship between intention to quit, job demands-resources and psychological safety as variables of this study Results In investigating the association between job demands (work overload and technological demands) and intention to quit, correlation analysis results indicated a weak and negative relationship between technological demand and intention to quit. to determine whether job resources (job autonomy and performance feedback) would be able to predict the intention to quit, the multiple regression model was performed. Although a weak and negative correlation between job resources and intention to quit existed, there was no sufficient evidence that job resources could be a good predictor of intention to quit since the regression model highlighted an insignificant value of 0.411 which is greater than 0.05. The multiple regression highlighted that when psychological safety was introduced, it was found that combined psychological safety and job demand were good predictors of intention to quit and it was significant at 0.05 since the significance level of the model was 0.03. The multiple regression highlighted that when psychological safety was introduced, it was found that combined psychological safety and job demand were good predictors of intention to quit and it was significant at 0.05 since the significance level of the model was 0.02. Findings The findings from the results supported various discussions and studies in the literature and practice, that psychological safety moderates the relationship between job demands, job resources, and intention to quit. Further evidence was also found in support of the conservation of resources theory. Managerial Implications The results of the present research study embrace a practical implication for organisations in that the findings support the literature suggesting that psychological safety moderates the relationship between job demands, job resources, and intention to quit. The findings further contribute to a growing body of knowledge surrounding intention to quit, job demands, job resources, and psychological safety fields of research.
107

Strategies to Improve Engagement Among Public Sector Information Technology Employees

Benham, Michelle Dawn 01 January 2017 (has links)
Disengaged employees decrease organizations' efficiencies and profitability. Engaged employees provide greater productivity and performance while being less likely to incur job burnout and exhaustion. However, public sector organizational leaders still struggle to engage their information technology (IT) employees. Partnering with a large public sector organization in the Phoenix, Arizona, metropolitan area, in a case study design, this study explored the strategies that public sector business leaders use to increase productivity through engaging IT employees. The conceptual framework for this study was the job demands-resources framework. Four participants were selected through purposeful sampling from a population of 7 IT leaders who had successfully increased employee engagement and their teams' performance. After collecting data through in-person semistructured interviews from 4 participants, member checking, and organizational documentation, an iterative pattern-matching data analysis process revealed key themes from coded words and phrases. The themes were also verified through methodological triangulation through comparisons with related organizational documentation. The key themes for engaging public sector IT employees were developing positive relationships, providing empowerment with support, and connecting work with meaningful purpose. Each theme included specific supporting implementation strategies. The implications for social change are that engaged employees are less likely to experience job burnout and incur fewer health problems, and therefore have a greater capacity to care for family, friends, and communities.
108

Relationships between Agile Work Practices and Occupational Well-Being: The Role of Job Demands and Resources

Rietze, Sarah, Zacher, Hannes 02 June 2023 (has links)
Agile work practices have been adopted by most software development organizations and by many large organizations from other industries. The introduction of agile work practices is assumed to positively affect work characteristics and, in turn, well-being of employees. So far, there is only very little and methodologically limited empirical research on this topic. Based on job demands–resources theory, we developed and tested a model on the direct and indirect relationships between agile work practices, job demands and resources, and occupational well-being. Data were provided by 260 employees working in agile development teams who participated in two surveys that were approximately six weeks apart. Results of structural equation modeling provided support for the hypothesized model, suggesting that agile work practices have a negative indirect effect on emotional fatigue through lower job demands. At the same time, agile work practices also had a positive indirect effect on emotional engagement through higher job resources. Our research contributes to the literature by integrating agile work practices with job demands–resources theory, bridging an important gap between research and practice. Overall, the findings suggest that the implementation of agile work practices may have a positive impact on occupational well-being by improving employees’ perceptions of key work characteristics.
109

Sambandet mellan mängden distansarbete, psykisk ohälsa och den psykosociala arbetsmiljön / The relationship between the extent of telework, mental illness and psychosocial work environment

Cikota Molnar, Nikolina January 2023 (has links)
Covid-19 pandemin blev startskottet på en oväntad samhällsförändring. På grund av pandemin ökade distansarbetet på våra arbetsplatser, samtidigt har även den psykiska ohälsan ökat och är idag en stor anledning till sjukskrivningar. I Arbetsmiljöverkets rapport presenterades det att 30% av arbetstagare upplevde arbetsrelaterad depression eller utmattningssymtom under 2020. Forskare menar att i och med teknikensutveckling och ökningen av den psykisk ohälsan, kommer samhället mötas av nya arbetsrelaterade hälsoproblem kopplade till distansarbetet. För att möta de framtida hälsoproblemen är det av vikt att undersöka olika aspekter av distansarbetet som kan ha ett samband med arbetstagares psykiska ohälsa, och vilka arbetsrelaterade faktorer som kan påverka sambandet. Syftet med denna studie är således att undersöka om det finns ett samband mellan mängden distansarbete och psykisk ohälsa samt om arbetets krav och resurser påverkar sambandet hos tjänstemän. Denna studie är en registerstudie med en kvantitativ tvärsnittsdesign. Urvalet bestod av 2835 tjänstemän från sex olika organisationer i Sverige. För att besvara studiens två forskningsfrågor har fyra linjära regressionsanalyser utförts. Forskningsfråga ett besvaras med och utan bakgrundsvariabler, likaså forskningsfråga två. Däremot inkluderas även förväxlingsvariabler i forskningsfråga två. Resultatet visar att det inte fanns något signifikant samband mellan mängden distansarbete och utmattning respektive depression, vidare förändrade arbetets krav och resurser inte resultatet. Däremot identifierades ett signifikant samband mellan utmattning respektive depression och ålder, civilstånd, arbetskrav och arbetsresurs. Utmattning och depression minskade med åldern samt när tjänstemännen befann sig i ett partnerskap. Höga arbetskrav och låga arbetsresurser visade samband med mer utmattning och depression. Slutsatsen är att det inte föreligger något samband mellan mängden distansarbete och psykisk ohälsa hos tjänstemän. Sambandet förändrades inte när arbetets krav och resurser beaktades. Fortsatt forskning kan göras genom att inkludera respondenternas upplevelse av distansarbetet under Covid-19, då data samlades in under pandemin. Genom att ta reda på om de upplevde distansarbetet som påtvingat eller inte, kan vi utröna om pandemins effekter hade påverkat resultatet. / The aim of this study was to investigate whether there is a relationship between the extent of telework and mental illness and whether job-demands and job- resources affected the relationship in white-collar workers. This is a register study with a quantitative cross-sectional design, that consisted of 2835 white collar workers from six different organisations in Sweden. To answer the study’s two reasearch questions, four linear regression analyses were performed. The analyses included background and confounding variables.The result showed that there was no significant relationship between the extent of telework and burnout or depression. Furthermore, the results did not change when job demands and resources were included. There was however a significant relationship between burnout and depression and age, marital status, job-demands and job-resources.The conclusion was that no evidence showed of a relationship between extent of telework and mental illness in white-collar workers and it did not change when job-demands and job-resources were taken into account. Further research can be done by including respondent’s experience of telework during COVID-19, as data was collected during the time of the pandemic. By finding out whether they percieved the extent of telework as forces or not, we can identify if the effects of the pandemic had affected the results.
110

The role of demands and resources in the international work context : conceptual approach and empirical analysis

Rattrie, Lucy T. B. January 2013 (has links)
The Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) model (Bakker and colleagues) has received increasing attention in recent years, yet there is a distinct literature gap regarding its utility and value towards the international work context. In line with this, understanding how to design jobs representing enhanced climates of work engagement for internationally operating staff alludes practitioners. This thesis therefore aims to substantiate the claim that previous research applying the JD-R model has neglected the international work context and evaluate whether the model has potential to be used as a framework for managing burnout, work engagement and related outcomes beyond the use in solely national contexts. In order to do so, two review studies (systematic and meta-analytic) and two empirical studies (qualitative and quantitative) are conducted of the JD-R model in the international work context. Findings suggest: that existing JD-R literature does not consider the international work context, highlighting a distinct literature gap requiring attention, in order to achieve a holistic understanding of the model and its applicability; strong meta-analytic support for the JD-R model and the impact of variation in the international work context represented by dimensions of national culture; the JD-R model has potential for responding to the management of burnout and work engagement for international business travelers but may benefit from theoretical amendments that focus the models utility and direct scholarly research and practitioner approaches; that the model may not be as valuable as assumed for the international business traveler context, yet it is worth considering the findings in light of relevant literature and possible limitations. Overall, the findings suggest a distinct need for more research examining the JD-R model in the international work context. A number of potential theoretical amendments are suggested in a conceptual internationalized JD-R model that can be used as a foundation for future empirical work to establish the boundaries of the model and its utility. From a practitioner perspective, until more research is conducted, JD-R principles should be applied with caution. As a whole, this thesis encompasses theoretical, empirical and practical contributions relevant for scholarly and practitioner communities which can be built upon over time with regards to the proposed conceptual model.

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