Affiliation:
1. Distinguished Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Macau , Taipa, Macau , China
2. School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University Northwest , Gary, IN , USA
3. Department of Criminal Justice, Wayne State University , Detroit, MI , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Very little research has been conducted on how workplace variables are associated with Chinese police job satisfaction. The present study fills this gap. Using responses from 589 Chinese police officers, the association of job satisfaction with workplace job demands (i.e. role ambiguity, role conflict, role overload, and perceived dangerousness of the job) and workplace job resources (training, job variety, job autonomy, and quality supervision) were tested. Ordinary least squares regression analysis indicated that role conflict, role overload, and dangerousness of the job all had non-significant associations with job satisfaction. Role ambiguity was a significant negative predictor, while training, job variety, job autonomy, and quality supervision all had significant positive relationships with job satisfaction. The results indicate that Chinese police administrators need to reduce role ambiguity and to improve training views, job variety, job autonomy, and quality supervision, which, in turn, should increase the level of satisfaction gained from the job by officers.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)