Anyone who has ever had a job has probably experienced
work-related stress at some point or another. For many workers,
however, job-related stress is experienced every day and reaches
more extreme levels. Four in ten American workers say that their
jobs are very or extremely stressful. Job stress is recognized as
an epidemic in the workplace, and its economic and health care
costs are staggering: by some estimates over $ 1 billion per year
in lost productivity, absenteeism and worker turnover, and at least
that much in treating its health effects, ranging from anxiety and
psychological depression to cardiovascular disease and
hypertension.
Why are so many American workers so stressed out by their jobs?
Many psychologists say stress is the result of a mismatch between
the characteristics of a job and the personality of the worker.
Many management consultants propose reducing stress by redesigning
jobs and developing better individual strategies for coping with
their stress. But, these explanations are not the whole story. They
don t explain why some jobs and some occupations are more stressful
than other jobs and occupations, regardless of the personalities
and coping strategies of individual workers. Why do auto assembly
line workers and air traffic controllers report more job stress
than university professors, self-employed business owners, or
corporate managers (yes, managers )?
The authors of "Work and Mental Health in Social Context" take a
different approach to understanding the causes of job stress. Job
stress is "systematically "created by the characteristics of the
jobs themselves: by the workers occupation, the organizations in
which they work, their placements in different labor markets, and
by broader social, economic and institutional structures, processes
and events. And "disparities" in job stress are "systematically"
determined in much the same way as are other disparities in health,
income, and mobility opportunities.
In taking this approach, the authors draw on the observations
and insights from a diverse field of sociological and economic
theories and research. These go back to the nineteenth century
writings of Marx, Weber and Durkheim on the relationship between
work and well-being. They also include the more contemporary work
in organizational sociology, structural labor market research from
sociology and economics, research on unemployment and economic
cycles, and research on institutional environments. This has
allowed the authors to develop a unified framework that extends
sociological models of income inequality and status attainment (or
allocation) to the explanation of non-economic, health-related
outcomes of work. Using a multi-level structural model, this timely
and comprehensive volume explores what is stressful about work, and
why; specifically address these and questions and more:
-What characteristics of jobs are the most stressful; what
characteristics reduce stress?
-Why do work organizations structure some jobs to be highly
stressful and some jobs to be much less stressful? Is work in a
bureaucracy really more stressful?
-How is occupational status occupational power and authority
related to the stressfulness of work?
-How does the segmentation of labor markets by occupation,
industry, race, gender, and citizenship maintain disparities in job
stress?
- Why is unemployment stressful to workers who don t lose their
jobs?
-How do public policies on employment status, collective
bargaining, overtime affect job stress?
-Is work in the current Post (neo) Fordist era of work more or
less stressful than work during the Fordist era?
In addition to providing a new way to understand the
sociological causes of job stress and mental health, the model that
the authors provide has broad applications to further study of this
important area of research. This volume will be of key interest to
sociologists and other researchers studying social stratification,
public health, political economy, institutional and organizational
theory.
"
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!