Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study

Orientation: Organisational commitment (OC) is often depicted as a desirable employee attitude and relates to organisational performance. Little research has been carried out on the (Human Resource) HR practices–OC relationship within the South African context, and specifically with regard to this r...

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Main Authors: Renier Steyn, Magda L. Bezuidenhout, Anton Grobler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-05-01
Series:South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/841
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spelling doaj-e4410b5efae148e28011545d89546fe82020-11-24T20:47:16ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Human Resource Management1683-75842071-078X2017-05-01150e1e910.4102/sajhrm.v15i0.841403Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative studyRenier Steyn0Magda L. Bezuidenhout1Anton Grobler2Graduate School of Business Leadership, University of South AfricaDepartment of Human Resource Management, University of South AfricaGraduate School of Business Leadership, University of South AfricaOrientation: Organisational commitment (OC) is often depicted as a desirable employee attitude and relates to organisational performance. Little research has been carried out on the (Human Resource) HR practices–OC relationship within the South African context, and specifically with regard to this relationship across various sectors. Research purpose: The purpose of this contribution is to specify the HR practices–OC relationship, within South Africa, and specifically across various sectors. Motivation for the study: It addresses the important matter of OC, a necessary requirement for sustaining organisations, through effective delivery of HR practices. Research design, approach and method: This study is based on a cross-sectional survey design, collecting primary data on HR practices and OC from South African employees in public and private sector organisations, as well as state-owned entities. Main findings: Minimal practically significant mean scored differences were detected among HR practices delivered per sector. Furthermore, a positive link between effective HR practices and OC was found within each of the three sectors, but this relationship was sector-specific. Practical implications: The findings of this study offer a new, contextualised perspective on the HR practices–OC relationship. The data gathered could assist practitioners in reshaping HR policies – and particularly practices – to suit their specific sector. Contribution and value add: The findings of this study are expected to offer valuable insight into the deferential management along sector lines. They also reiterate the importance of localised research and caution practitioners not to transfer research findings to local settings without a thorough investigation of local research.https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/841organisational commitmenthuman resource management servicespublic sectorprivate sectorstate-owned entitiessectorial comparison
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renier Steyn
Magda L. Bezuidenhout
Anton Grobler
spellingShingle Renier Steyn
Magda L. Bezuidenhout
Anton Grobler
Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study
South African Journal of Human Resource Management
organisational commitment
human resource management services
public sector
private sector
state-owned entities
sectorial comparison
author_facet Renier Steyn
Magda L. Bezuidenhout
Anton Grobler
author_sort Renier Steyn
title Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study
title_short Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study
title_full Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study
title_fullStr Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study
title_full_unstemmed Human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: A sectoral comparative study
title_sort human resource practices and affective organisational commitment: a sectoral comparative study
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1683-7584
2071-078X
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Orientation: Organisational commitment (OC) is often depicted as a desirable employee attitude and relates to organisational performance. Little research has been carried out on the (Human Resource) HR practices–OC relationship within the South African context, and specifically with regard to this relationship across various sectors. Research purpose: The purpose of this contribution is to specify the HR practices–OC relationship, within South Africa, and specifically across various sectors. Motivation for the study: It addresses the important matter of OC, a necessary requirement for sustaining organisations, through effective delivery of HR practices. Research design, approach and method: This study is based on a cross-sectional survey design, collecting primary data on HR practices and OC from South African employees in public and private sector organisations, as well as state-owned entities. Main findings: Minimal practically significant mean scored differences were detected among HR practices delivered per sector. Furthermore, a positive link between effective HR practices and OC was found within each of the three sectors, but this relationship was sector-specific. Practical implications: The findings of this study offer a new, contextualised perspective on the HR practices–OC relationship. The data gathered could assist practitioners in reshaping HR policies – and particularly practices – to suit their specific sector. Contribution and value add: The findings of this study are expected to offer valuable insight into the deferential management along sector lines. They also reiterate the importance of localised research and caution practitioners not to transfer research findings to local settings without a thorough investigation of local research.
topic organisational commitment
human resource management services
public sector
private sector
state-owned entities
sectorial comparison
url https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/841
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AT magdalbezuidenhout humanresourcepracticesandaffectiveorganisationalcommitmentasectoralcomparativestudy
AT antongrobler humanresourcepracticesandaffectiveorganisationalcommitmentasectoralcomparativestudy
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