Artigo em revista científica Q2
Promoting work motivation in organizations: Should employee involvement in organizational leadership become a new tool in the organizational psychologists' armoury?
Jurgen Wegge (Wegge, J.); Jeppe Jeppeseen (Jeppeseen, J.); Craig Pearce (Pearce, C.); Wolfgange Weber (Weber, W.); Sílvia Agostinho da Silva (Silva, S.A.);
Título Revista
Journal of Personnel Psychology
Ano (publicação definitiva)
2010
Língua
Inglês
País
Alemanha
Mais Informação
Web of Science®

N.º de citações: 80

(Última verificação: 2024-11-22 01:15)

Ver o registo na Web of Science®


: 5.0
Scopus

N.º de citações: 69

(Última verificação: 2024-11-17 09:12)

Ver o registo na Scopus


: 3.8
Google Scholar

Esta publicação não está indexada no Google Scholar

Abstract/Resumo
What are the best interventions that Work and Organizational Psychology offers today for promoting high work motivation in organizations? This paper seeks to answer this question in two steps. First, we briefly summarize the main findings from 26 meta-analyses concerned with traditional practices such as goal setting, feedback, work design, financial incentives, or training. These practices can improve both organizational performance and the well-being of organizational members. Second, we examine in more depth a new, increasingly important high performance work practice: Employee involvement in organizational leadership (EIOL). This approach is built on theories focusing on organizational participation, shared leadership, and organizational democracy. We also illustrate recently constructed measurement instruments for assessing these constructs. This synopsis leads us to the development of a new integrative, multilevel model of EIOL. The model includes several mediator (e.g., knowledge exchange) and moderator variables (e.g., self-leadership competencies of actors) that explain why and when this approach is effective. We conclude that future research should focus on cross-level interactions of different forms of organizational participation, shared leadership, and organizational democracy, and seek to identify the processes mediating their interplay.
Agradecimentos/Acknowledgements
--
Palavras-chave
employee involvement; participation; shared leadership; organizational democracy; self-leadership; occupational health; work motivation
  • Psicologia - Ciências Sociais