Two sides of the same coin: Appraising job‐related attributes as resilience enhancing or undermining

Author:

Maley Jane Frances12ORCID,Mitchell Rebecca2ORCID,Boyle Brendan3,McNeil Karen2,Trau Raymond2

Affiliation:

1. Sabanci Business School Sabanci University Istanbul Turkey

2. Department of Management Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Newcastle Business School University Drive Callaghan New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractIncreasing stress levels in the workplace is an economic and social issue for many industries, and coal mining is no exception. However, more recently mining coal has become an intense moral and ethical issue subjecting workers to psychosocial related stress. Previous research has demonstrated that resilience can help manage individual stress to improve health outcomes and workplace productivity. This study examines data collected from 61 interviews with various workers in the coal industry in Australia throughout immense and stressful uncertainty. Drawing on the Job‐Demands‐Resource and the Transaction of Stress and Coping theories, we find that crucial elements of human resource management processes, supervision and the employee work unit may be modelled as either demands or resources. More significantly, we find that the individual's subjective appraisal of job‐related demands and resources plays a significant role in enhancing or undermining their resilience. For theory, this study extends the Job‐Demands‐Resource model by challenging the prevailing assumption that job‐related attributes act as demands or resources in terms of their relationship with resilience; for human resource management practice, the findings help focus on how particular strategies can best support and promote employee resilience.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management

Reference80 articles.

1. Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2021).6291.0.55.001 labour force Australia detailed. Table 06. Employed persons by industry sub‐division of main job (ANZSIC) and sex. Retrieved fromhttps://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/labour/employment‐and‐unemployment/labour‐force‐australia‐detailed/latest‐release

2. Psychological capital: A positive resource for combating employee stress and turnover

3. PLAYING THE MEDIA GAME

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