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Organizational Psychology of Mergers and Acquisitions provides a
comprehensive perspective that helps you understand, empathise and
protect the wellbeing of employees who experience mergers and
acquisitions. This book gives a state-of-the-art review that
crosses different subjects within psychology including
psychobiology, neuroscience, social psychology, interpersonal
relationships, and organizational psychology. This book discusses
why many employees think of mergers or acquisitions as scary or
threatening events, why negative emotions are prevalent, their
psychobiological impact and how to assess employees' emotional
responses using a new toolkit. It helps readers learn what counts
as good leadership, considering the role of charisma, personality,
context and information processing abilities. This book includes
the issue of organizational learning, and the relevance of
occupational health and safety to due diligence about mergers and
acquisitions through case studies about organizations sued for
cancer or cancer-related mortality after a merger or acquisition.
This book is mandatory reading for students, academics, and
practitioners working with organizations experiencing a merger or
an acquisition such as consultants, human resource professionals,
psychologists, occupational health professionals, and employees
involved in strategy, management, or people development.
Organizational Psychology of Mergers and Acquisitions provides a
comprehensive perspective that helps you understand, empathise and
protect the wellbeing of employees who experience mergers and
acquisitions. This book gives a state-of-the-art review that
crosses different subjects within psychology including
psychobiology, neuroscience, social psychology, interpersonal
relationships, and organizational psychology. This book discusses
why many employees think of mergers or acquisitions as scary or
threatening events, why negative emotions are prevalent, their
psychobiological impact and how to assess employees' emotional
responses using a new toolkit. It helps readers learn what counts
as good leadership, considering the role of charisma, personality,
context and information processing abilities. This book includes
the issue of organizational learning, and the relevance of
occupational health and safety to due diligence about mergers and
acquisitions through case studies about organizations sued for
cancer or cancer-related mortality after a merger or acquisition.
This book is mandatory reading for students, academics, and
practitioners working with organizations experiencing a merger or
an acquisition such as consultants, human resource professionals,
psychologists, occupational health professionals, and employees
involved in strategy, management, or people development.
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