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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Careers in context: An international study of career goals as mesostructure between societies' career‐related human potential and proactive career behaviour

Maike Andresen, +51 more
- 01 Jul 2020 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 3, pp 365-391
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TLDR
In this paper, a survey of 17,986 employees from 27 countries, covering nine of GLOBE's 10 cultural clusters, and national statistical data was used to examine the relationship between societal context and actors' career goals (career mesostructure) and career behaviour (actions).
Abstract
Careers exist in a societal context that offers both constraints and opportunities for career actors. Whereas most studies focus on proximal individual and/or organisational‐level variables, we provide insights into how career goals and behaviours are understood and embedded in the more distal societal context. More specifically, we operationalise societal context using the career‐related human potential composite and aim to understand if and why career goals and behaviours vary between countries. Drawing on a model of career structuration and using multilevel mediation modelling, we draw on a survey of 17,986 employees from 27 countries, covering nine of GLOBE's 10 cultural clusters, and national statistical data to examine the relationship between societal context (macrostructure building the career‐opportunity structure) and actors' career goals (career mesostructure) and career behaviour (actions). We show that societal context in terms of societies' career‐related human potential composite is negatively associated with the importance given to financial achievements as a specific career mesostructure in a society that is positively related to individuals' proactive career behaviour. Our career mesostructure fully mediates the relationship between societal context and individuals' proactive career behaviour. In this way, we expand career theory's scope beyond occupation‐ and organisation‐related factors.

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Citations
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human Development Index

Luisa Mengoni
TL;DR: The 2013 Human Development Index (HDI) as discussed by the authors covers 187 countries, the same number of countries as in 2012 and 2011, and is used to assess the human development of a country.
Book ChapterDOI

Income Inequality : Understanding the Needs of Economically Disadvantaged Children and Families

TL;DR: The Gini coefficient as discussed by the authors is a more complete measure of income inequality, considering the entire income distribution, and it indicates that income inequality is rising overall, and that the increasing disparity of income in the U.S. over the past 30 years results from skill-biased technological change that has benefited higher-skilled workers.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Human resource management: the promise, the performance, the consequences

TL;DR: The dominant focus of HRM research has been that of "strategic HRM" as mentioned in this paper, that is a focus on the impact of HRMs on firm performance, and the authors argue that the cumulative results of this "dominant research orthodoxy" are disappointing in terms of their external validity, but also they are of limited practical value.

Organizational Demography and Individual Careers: Structure, Norms, and Outcomes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the dynamics by which demographic patterns influence an individual's career choices and how individual actions shape the processes of demographic change within organizations, and present one approach to explore such questions.
Journal ArticleDOI

‘Ultimately the question always is: “What do I have to do to do it right?”’ Scripts as explanatory factors of career decisions:

TL;DR: In this paper, the integration of individual agency and structural conditions of action in explanations of career decisions is addressed, and the authors address one of the recurrent problems of career theory, namely the integration integration.
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How does the correlation between identities and career paths vary across different cultural and societal contexts?

Career goals and behaviors vary across societies due to societal context's influence on career-related human potential, impacting the importance of financial achievements and proactive career behavior.