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High involvement management, high-performance work systems and well-being

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H

Wood, Stephen J. ; de Menezes, Lilian

International Journal of Human Resource Management

2011

22

7

April

1586-1610

job satisfaction ; quality of working life ; well being ; high performance work system

United Kingdom

Quality of working life

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2011.561967

English

Bibliogr.

"Studies on the impact of high-performance work systems on employees' well-being are emerging but the underlying theory remains weak. This paper attempts to develop theory of the effects on well-being of four dimensions of high-performance work systems: enriched jobs, high involvement management, employee voice, and motivational supports. Hypothesized associations are tested using multilevel models and data from Britain's Workplace Employment Relations Survey of 2004 (WERS2004). Results show that enriched jobs are positively associated with both measures of well-being: job satisfaction and anxiety–contentment. Voice is positively associated with job satisfaction, and motivational supports with neither measure. The results for high involvement management are not as predicted because it increases anxiety and is independent of job satisfaction."

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