Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions

Building on previous leadership and well-being research, the aims of the present study were to investigate the relationship between ethical leadership and employee well-being (work engagement and emotional exhaustion) within student unions. We also considered the role of trust as a potential mediato...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Josh Rivers, Neill Thompson, Debora Jeske
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Management at Comenius University in Bratislava 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jhrm.eu/2018/11/16-dedicated-but-exhausted-the-role-of-ethical-leadership-for-employee-wellbeing-in-uk-student-unions/
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spelling doaj-891be7b7f6534d91b8a933a50f1c31b42020-11-25T00:48:02ZengFaculty of Management at Comenius University in BratislavaJournal of Human Resource Management1335-38882453-76832018-11-0121627Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unionsJosh Rivers0Neill Thompson1Debora Jeske2Northumbria University, UKNorthumbria University, UKUniversity College Cork, IrelandBuilding on previous leadership and well-being research, the aims of the present study were to investigate the relationship between ethical leadership and employee well-being (work engagement and emotional exhaustion) within student unions. We also considered the role of trust as a potential mediator in this relationship. Survey data was collected from 137 full-time employees working at student unions in the UK. Path model analysis revealed that trust in one’s manager partially mediated the effects of ethical leadership and work engagement and emotional exhaustion. While trust increased work engagement and reduced emotional exhaustion, ethical leadership also had a significant indirect effect on both outcomes. An interaction between employee dedication and ratings for manager’s ethical leadership suggested that more dedicated employees are less emotionally exhausted if their managers scored highly on ethical leadership. However, when the employees felt less dedicated to the job, managers’ ethical leadership behaviours did not reduce employees’ emotional exhaustion. The study examined the effect of ethical leadership in student unions, adding to the very sparse research on the experience of full-time employees working for student unions.https://www.jhrm.eu/2018/11/16-dedicated-but-exhausted-the-role-of-ethical-leadership-for-employee-wellbeing-in-uk-student-unions/non-profitethical leadershiptrustwork engagementdedication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josh Rivers
Neill Thompson
Debora Jeske
spellingShingle Josh Rivers
Neill Thompson
Debora Jeske
Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions
Journal of Human Resource Management
non-profit
ethical leadership
trust
work engagement
dedication
author_facet Josh Rivers
Neill Thompson
Debora Jeske
author_sort Josh Rivers
title Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions
title_short Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions
title_full Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions
title_fullStr Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions
title_full_unstemmed Dedicated but exhausted? The role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in UK student unions
title_sort dedicated but exhausted? the role of ethical leadership for employee wellbeing in uk student unions
publisher Faculty of Management at Comenius University in Bratislava
series Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1335-3888
2453-7683
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Building on previous leadership and well-being research, the aims of the present study were to investigate the relationship between ethical leadership and employee well-being (work engagement and emotional exhaustion) within student unions. We also considered the role of trust as a potential mediator in this relationship. Survey data was collected from 137 full-time employees working at student unions in the UK. Path model analysis revealed that trust in one’s manager partially mediated the effects of ethical leadership and work engagement and emotional exhaustion. While trust increased work engagement and reduced emotional exhaustion, ethical leadership also had a significant indirect effect on both outcomes. An interaction between employee dedication and ratings for manager’s ethical leadership suggested that more dedicated employees are less emotionally exhausted if their managers scored highly on ethical leadership. However, when the employees felt less dedicated to the job, managers’ ethical leadership behaviours did not reduce employees’ emotional exhaustion. The study examined the effect of ethical leadership in student unions, adding to the very sparse research on the experience of full-time employees working for student unions.
topic non-profit
ethical leadership
trust
work engagement
dedication
url https://www.jhrm.eu/2018/11/16-dedicated-but-exhausted-the-role-of-ethical-leadership-for-employee-wellbeing-in-uk-student-unions/
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