ISBN-13: 9780415880770 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 664 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415880770 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 664 str.
EOR is an overarching term to describe the relationship between the employee and the organization. It encompasses psychological contracts, perceived organizational support, and the employment relationship. Remarkable progress has been made in the last 30 years in the study of EOR. This volume, by a stellar list of international contributors, offers perspectives on EOR that will be of interest to scholars, practitioners and graduate students in IO psychology, business and human resource management.
J.N. Cleveland, K.R. Murphy, Series Foreword. L.M. Shore, J.A.-M. Coyle-Shapiro, L.E. Tetrick, Expanding the Boundaries and Challenging the Assumptions of the Employee–Organization Relationship (EOR) Literature. Part 1. New Ways of Thinking about the EOR. B.E. Ashforth, K.M. Rogers, Is the Employee–Organization Relationship Misspecified? The Centrality of Tribes in Experiencing the Organization. M. Schminke, The Employee–Organization Relationship and Ethics: When it Comes to Ethical Behavior, Who is the Organization and Why Does it Matter? D. van Kippenberg, Social Identity-Based Leadership and the Employee–Organization Relationship. J. McLean Parks, F.L. Smith, Resource Commensurability and Ideological Elements of the Exchange Relationship. L.M. Shore, J.A.-M. Coyle-Shapiro, Perceived Organizational Cruelty: An Expansion of the Negative Employee–Organization Relationship Domain. J.L. Pearce, Assumptions in Employee–Organization Relationship Research: A Critical Perspective from the Study of Volunteers. Part 2. Putting the ‘R’ Back in the EOR. D.E. Guest, R. Rodrigues, Can the Organizational Career Survive? An Evaluation within a Social Exchange Perspective. E. Ernst Kossek, M.N. Ruderman, Work–Family Flexibility and the Employment Relationship. D.G. Gallagher, C.E. Connelly, Rethinking the EOR: Insights from the Experiences of Contingent Workers. K.M. Bartol, Y. Dong, Virtual EOR: Linking in to the Challenge of Increasingly Virtual Employee–Organizational Relationships. R. Takeuchi, A Relational Perspective on the Employee–Organization Relationship: A Critique and Proposed Extension. Part 3. Creation, Maintenance and Complexion of the EOR. D.L. Shapiro, M. Fugate, Fostering Anticipatory Justice: A New Option for Enhancing the Employee–Organization Relationship? A.M. Ryan, AOR and EOR: What's the Connection? P.W. Hom, Employee–Organizational Relationships: Their Impact on Push-and-Pull Forces for Staying and Leaving. M. Wang, Y. Zhan, Employee–Organization Relationships in Older Workers. Part 4. Organizational and Strategic Implications. D. Lepak, W.R. Boswell, Strategic HRM and Employee–Organizational Relationship (EOR). L.E. Tetrick, Emotions: The Glue that Holds the Employee–Organization Relationships Together (or Not). D.R. Avery, P.F. McKay, Q.M. Roberson, Managing Diversity Means Managing Differently: A Look at the Role of Racioethnicity in Perceptions of Organizational Support. E. Salas, S.M. Fiore, Why Work Teams Fail in Organizations: Myths and Advice. W.F. Cascio, R.J. Greene, The EOR and the Scholar–Practitioner Divide. L.M. Shore, J.A.-M. Coyle-Shapiro, L.E. Tetrick, What We Have Learned and Recommendations Going Forward.
Lynn M. Shore is Professor of Management at San Diego State University and Co-Director of the Institute for Inclusiveness and Diversity in Organizations. Previously she was on the faculty at Georgia State University and University of California, Irvine. She has been a Visiting Scholar at London School for Economics and Political Science, University of Toulouse, Dauphine University, and The Chinese University of Hong Kong. Dr. Shore has held leadership roles in the Academy of Management, having served as Human Resources Division Chair (2000-2001), on the HR Executive Committee (1995-1998), as Professional Development Workshop Chair for the Diversity and Inclusion Theme Committee (2010-2011), and on the GDO Executive Committee (2011-2014). Her research areas are the employment relationship and work force inclusion and diversity. In the area of employment relationships, she has researched such topics as perceived organizational support, psychological contracts, leader-member exchange, and international aspects of employment relationships. Dr. Shore’s work on inclusion has studied factors that facilitate high-functioning groups, and on diversity has examined the impact that composition of the work group and employee/supervisor dyads has on the attitudes and performance of work groups and individual employees. Her articles have appeared in Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Journal of Applied Psychology, Personnel Psychology, and Journal of Management. Dr. Shore is a former Associate Editor of the Journal of Applied Psychology, and serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Management, and Journal of Organizational Behavior. She is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology.
Jacqueline Coyle-Shapiro is Professor in Organizational Behaviour at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) where she received her PhD in 1996. Prior to joining the LSE, she was a Lecturer at the School of Management, University of Oxford. She has published in such journals as the Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Organizational Behavior and the Journal of Vocational Behavior. She is currently Senior Editor at the Journal of Organizational Behavior and serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Management, Journal of Applied Behavioral Science and Journal of Managerial Psychology. Jacqueline’s research focuses on studying relationships in organizational settings; their antecedents, mechanisms and consequences. Specifically, her research interests include employee-organization relationship, psychological contracts, perceived organizational support, social exchange theory, organizational justice, organizational citizenship behaviour, and communal relationships. She is also a member of the Innovation Co-creation Lab http://icclab.com where she conducts research on how relationships within groups facilitate or hinder the innovation process. She has been elected to the leadership track of the OB division of the Academy of Management 2011-2015.
Dr. Lois E. Tetrick received her doctorate in Industrial and Organizational Psychology from Georgia Institute of Technology in 1983. Upon completion of her doctoral studies, she joined the faculty of the Department of Psychology at Wayne State University and remained there until 1995 when she moved to the Department of Psychology at the University of Houston. She joined the faculty at George Mason University in 2003 where she is the Director of the Industrial and Organizational Psychology Program.
Professor Tetrick is currently a consulting editor for the Journal of Applied Psychology and is on the editorial boards of the Journal of Organizational Behavior and Management and Organization Review: The Journal of the International Association for Chinese Management Research. She is a former editor of the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology and a former associate editor of the Journal of Applied Psychology. Dr. Tetrick is a co-editor with Jackie Coyle-Shapiro, Lynn Shore, and Susan Taylor of The employment relationship: Examining psychological and contextual perspectives. Recently, she and Jim Quick edited the 2nd edition of the Handbook of Occupational Health Psychology. Dr. Tetrick is a fellow of the American Psychological Association, the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, the American Psychological Society, and the European Academy of Occupational Health Psychology. She has served as President of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology and as Chair of the Human Resources Division of the Academy of Management.
Dr. Tetrick has two areas of research. One area focuses primarily on the employment exchange relationship including psychological contracts and the employee-organization relationship. The other area is occupational health psychology including such topics as safety, occupational stress, and the work-family interface. A common underlying interest in both of these lines of research is incorporating a global perspective in understanding employees’ experiences of the work environment.
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