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JournalISSN: 0048-3486

Personnel Review 

Emerald Publishing Limited
About: Personnel Review is an academic journal published by Emerald Publishing Limited. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Human resource management & Job satisfaction. It has an ISSN identifier of 0048-3486. Over the lifetime, 2234 publications have been published receiving 73641 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on the development of a self-report measure of individuals' perceived employability, and examine its construct validity and correlates, based on the analysis of relevant literature.
Abstract: Purpose – Employability concerns the extent to which people possess the skills and other attributes to find and stay in work of the kind they want. It is thought by many to be a key goal for individuals to aim for in managing their careers, and for organisations to foster in workforces. The purpose of this paper is to report on the development of a self‐report measure of individuals' perceived employability. It also seeks to examine its construct validity and correlates.Design/methodology/approach – Based on the analysis of relevant literature, this study developed 16 items which were intended collectively to reflect employability within and outside the person's current organisation, based on his or her personal and occupational attributes. This study administered these items by questionnaire to 200 human resources professionals in the UK, along with established measures of career success and professional commitment, as well as questions reflecting demographic variables.Findings – This article retained 11...

650 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the extent to which measures and operationalisations of intraorganisational trust reflect the essential elements of the existing conceptualisation of trust inside the workplace and present a framework of issues for researchers to consider when designing research based on trust.
Abstract: Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the extent to which measures and operationalisations of intra‐organisational trust reflect the essential elements of the existing conceptualisation of trust inside the workplace.Design/methodology/approach – The paper provides an overview of the essential points from the rich variety of competing conceptualisations and definitions in the management and organisational literatures. It draws on this overview to present a framework of issues for researchers to consider when designing research based on trust. This framework is then used to analyse the content of 14 recently published empirical measures of intra‐organisational trust. It is noted for each measure the form that trust takes, the content, the sources of evidence and the identity of the recipient, as well as matters related to the wording of items.Findings – The paper highlights where existing measures match the theory, but also shows a number of “blind‐spots” or contradictions, particularly over the...

551 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: However, there are significant problems with much of the prescriptive literature on empowerment, in that there is little detailed discussion of the problems employers may experience implementing empowerment or the conditions which are necessary for such an approach to be successful as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: In recent years, the term empowerment has become part of everyday management language. It has also been associated with popular management movements of the times such as human resource management (HRM) and total quality management (TQM). Empowerment is regarded as providing a solution to the age‐old problem of Taylorised and bureaucratic workplaces where creativity is stifled and workers become alienated, showing discontent through individual or collective means. However, there are significant problems with much of the prescriptive literature on empowerment, in that there is little detailed discussion of the problems employers may experience implementing empowerment or the conditions which are necessary for such an approach to be successful. It is assumed employees will simply welcome the new way of working. Moreover, it is also assumed that empowerment is a universal solution appropriate to all organisations in all circumstances. Empowerment itself is not seen in a contingent way. Such literature has also been criticised as superficial and furthermore as trivialising the conflict that exists within organisations.

531 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of 32 empirical studies on time management conducted between 1982 and 2004 as mentioned in this paper demonstrates that time management behaviours relate positively to perceived control of time, job satisfaction, and health, and negatively to stress.
Abstract: Purpose – The purpose of this article is to provide an overview for those interested in the current state‐of‐the‐art in time management research.Design/methodology/approach – This review includes 32 empirical studies on time management conducted between 1982 and 2004.Findings – The review demonstrates that time management behaviours relate positively to perceived control of time, job satisfaction, and health, and negatively to stress. The relationship with work and academic performance is not clear. Time management training seems to enhance time management skills, but this does not automatically transfer to better performance.Research limitations/implications – The reviewed research displays several limitations. First, time management has been defined and operationalised in a variety of ways. Some instruments were not reliable or valid, which could account for unstable findings. Second, many of the studies were based on cross‐sectional surveys and used self‐reports only. Third, very little attention was g...

496 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the moderating impacts of the Islamic work ethic on the relationships between organizational commitment and job satisfaction, using a sample of 425 Muslim employees in several organizations in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Abstract: This study investigates the moderating impacts of the Islamic work ethic on the relationships between organizational commitment and job satisfaction. It uses a sample of 425 Muslim employees in several organizations in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The empirical results indicate that the Islamic work ethic directly affects both organizational commitment and job satisfaction, and that it moderates the relationship between these two constructs. Results further reveal that national culture does not moderate the relationship between the Islamic work ethic and both organizational commitment and job satisfaction. Results also point out that support of the Islamic work ethic differs across age, education level, work experience, national culture, organization type (manufacturing or service), and ownership (private or public). Furthermore, empirical results suggest that there is a positive and significant relationship between job satisfaction and organizational commitment. Implications, limitations and lines of future research are discussed.

494 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202345
2022143
2021165
202086
2019173
201856