Putting employee involvement in context: a cross-level model examining job satisfaction and absenteeism in high-involvement work systems
Authors: Christopher D. Zatzick and Roderick D. Iverson
Overview
Abstract (English)
The current study examines how high-involvement work systems (HIWS) influence employee responses to involvement initiatives. While existing research has linked HIWS to individual attitudes, we predict that an organization’s HIWS moderate the relationship between employee involvement and job satisfaction and absenteeism. Using multilevel data (8454 employees from 1429 workplaces), we found that employee involvement and HIWS are positively related to employee job satisfaction. Additionally, the results support a cross-level interaction: at high levels of HIWS, employee involvement is negatively related to absenteeism, whereas at low levels of HIWS, the negative relationship is weaker. The implications of the findings are discussed.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Christopher D. Zatzick and Roderick D. Iverson |
Publication Year | 2011 |
Title | Putting employee involvement in context: a cross-level model examining job satisfaction and absenteeism in high-involvement work systems |
Volume | 22 |
Journal Name | The International Journal of Human Resource Management |
Number | 17 |
Pages | 3462-3476 |
Publication Language | English |
- Christopher D. Zatzick
- Christopher D. Zatzick and Roderick D. Iverson
- Putting employee involvement in context: a cross-level model examining job satisfaction and absenteeism in high-involvement work systems
- The International Journal of Human Resource Management
- 22
- 2011
- 17
- 3462-3476