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Offers a research-focused look into individual, organisational and
societal challenges, whilst providing clear and practical advice
for creating preventative measures. Edited by leading scholars in
the field, with a variety of international perspectives. Provides a
Resilience Paradigm, that practioners can apply to the workplace.
This timely book explores the psychological repercussions of Brexit
in the workplace. Illustrating the mental and emotional impact of
the Brexit process, interdisciplinary chapters demonstrate its
effect on the wellbeing of workers and its implications for the
welfare of the workforce in the future. Bringing together
international contributors from a range of disciplines, this
topical book focuses on key areas of workplace functioning,
including higher education institutions, corporate social
responsibility and the emerging experiences of businesses, migrant
workers and politicians. The major psychological, political and
economic implications for employers, employees and policy-makers
are considered, and the importance after Brexit of actions that
preserve and build on progress already achieved in the UK workplace
are highlighted. Brexit in the Workplace will appeal to scholars
and students of politics, psychology and business, as well as
business leaders and policy-makers wishing to gain valuable
insights into the range of issues facing the workforce in the
current atmosphere of political change and uncertainty around
Brexit.
Offers a research-focused look into individual, organisational and
societal challenges, whilst providing clear and practical advice
for creating preventative measures. Edited by leading scholars in
the field, with a variety of international perspectives. Provides a
Resilience Paradigm, that practioners can apply to the workplace.
The workforce is aging as people live longer and healthier lives,
and mandatory retirement has become a relic of the past. Though
workforces have always contained both younger and older employees
the age range today has expanded, and the generational gap has
become more distinct. This book advocates the need for talented
employees of all ages as a way to prevent potential skill shortages
and considers both the challenges and opportunities that these
changes raise for individual organizations. The expert contributors
discuss benefits including greater employee diversity with regards
to knowledge, skills experience and perspectives, as well as
challenges involving potential generational tensions, stereotypes
and age biases. They further place an emphasis on initiatives to
create generation-friendly workplaces; these involve fostering
lifelong learning, tackling age stereotypes and biases, employing
reverse mentoring where younger employees mentor older employees,
and offering older individuals career options including phased
retirement, bridge employment and encore careers. This
wide-reaching book will be of use to academics, PhD students, human
resource specialists, managers and government policy makers
interested in the aging and multigenerational workforce.
Contributors: A.-S.G. Antoniou, B. Baltes, J. Benson, S.
Bisom-Rapp, R.J. Burke, L. Calvano, D. Campbell, C.L. Cooper, J.B.
Cunningham, M. Dalla, J. Field, L. Fiksenbaum, A. Furnham, E.R.
Greenglass, B.M. Hughes, J.K.Q. Katter, J. Kroeker-Hall, L.A.
Marchiondo, J. McGinnis-Johnson, T. McNamara, D.M. McPhee, E.S.W.
Ng, M. Pitt-Catsouphes, S. Sandhu, M. Sargeant, S. Sastrowardoyo,
F. Schlosser, C. Scott-Young, S. Sweet, G. Thrasher, K. Zabel
The rapid and sweeping changes in the economy, technology, work
practices and family structures mean that organizational health
psychology has never been so essential for understanding stress in
the workplace. This timely Research Companion is essential reading
to advance the understanding of healthy behaviours within working
environments and to identify problems which can be the cause of
illness. Containing both theoretical and empirical contributions
written by distinguished academics working in Europe, North America
and Australia, the book covers leading edge topics ranging from
current theories of stress, stress management, and stress in
specific occupational groups, such as doctors and teachers, to the
relationship of stress with well-being. It provides systematic
approaches towards practical actions and stress interventions in
working environments and a solid theoretical framework for future
research. It will be an essential companion to research on
psychology and medicine as well as stress.
Two deep human needs are to master the world and to feel safe and
secure. The Great Recession thwarted both needs for millions of
people around the world. Cooper and Antoniou's global team of
scholars address the psychological, economic, social, and other
dimensions of our current crisis while charting paths whereby we
can again satisfy these needs. Let us rise above the crisis and
follow Aristotle's path to living well and faring well. This book
offers a plan for doing so.' - James Campell Quick, The University
of Texas at Arlington, USAn economic recession can affect the
aggregate well-being of a population. This highly regarded and
timely book shows a significant increase in the mean levels of
distress and dissatisfaction in the work place in recent years. In
particular, increasing job demands, intrinsic job insecurity and
increasingly inadequate salaries make substantial contributions to
psychological distress, family conflict and related behaviors. The
contributors reveal that the recession has fundamentally altered
the way employees view their work and leaders. With employers and
employees still facing a continued period of uncertainty, a severe
impact on employment relations is a continuing reality. Given the
difficult economic times, many people are feeling the pressure to
work harder. This book will be valuable for undergraduate students
and practitioners in the fields of organizational behavior and
human resource management. Contributors: A.-S. Antoniou, C.C.
Benight, K.A. Buchholz, R. Burke, D.A.J. Cable, R. Cieslak, M.
Dalla, L. Fiksenbaum, A. Furnham, E. Georgiadi, M. Givalos, E.
Greenglass, L.B. Hammer, I.L.D. Houtman, L. Jiang, H. Kahn, D.
Karaj, L. Kashahu, B.D. Kirkcaldy, M.A.J. Kompier, L. Lu, A.
Malach-Pines, D. Malinowska, Z. Marjanovic, G. Michailidis, G.
Mohr, M. O'Driscoll, K. Otto, T. Probst, T. Rigotti, M.M. Schaffer,
E.I. Shupe, R.R. Sinclair, E. Smoktunowicz, T.W. Taris, A. Tokarz,
M. Trzebinska, A.F. Wagenaar, N. Zaidman
This exciting Handbook provides an authoritative and comprehensive
overview of managerial behavior and occupational health. Containing
both theoretical and empirical contributions written by eminent
academics, the Handbook covers a range of factors that influence
behavior including migration and health, job insecurity, the impact
of age diversity, work stress and health in the context of social
inequality as well as occupational health from a psychological
perspective. It is an essential reference tool to further research
on psychology, stress and understanding the behaviors of health
within working environments. The book will be invaluable to
academics and students in the fields of occupational health.
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