Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors

The aim of the present thesis was to develop and test a process model of the consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors. A review of the literature revealed that conflict and change represent central dimensions of both industrial relations and stress theory. Furthermore, the p...

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Main Author: Bluen, Stephen David
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/16329
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-163292019-05-11T03:40:12Z Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors Bluen, Stephen David The aim of the present thesis was to develop and test a process model of the consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors. A review of the literature revealed that conflict and change represent central dimensions of both industrial relations and stress theory. Furthermore, the practice of industrial relations is inherently stressful: Forming a labour-management relationship, joint decision-making, implementing industrial relations decisions and breakdowns in the labour-management relationship are all potentially stressful activities for members of management and labour alike. However, despite the strong theoretical and practical association between industrial relations and stress, no attempt has been made to conduct a comprehensive x vpirical investigation of the stress associated with the practice of industrial relations. Accordingly, in the present thesis, the stress associated with a wide range of industrial relations events was examined. Before investigating the industrial relations stress process, it was necessary to develop an appropriate instrument to measure the stress associated with industrial relations practice. Thus the initial study was aimed at developing the Industrial Relations Event Scale. This was done using the life events approach, a well-documented means of measuring stress. Within the life events paradigm, Sarason's approach has been well-received as it overcomes many of the criticisms levelled against earlier life event scales. Consequently, Sarason's format was adopted for the development of the Industrial Relations Event Scale. The 63-item Industrial Relations Event Scale contains three subscales, the occurrence, negative and positive scales. The occurrence scale assesses retrospectively the number of industrial relations events that have occurred over a 12-month period, As such, the occurrence score provides an index of objective stressors. Subjective measures of stress are provided by the positive and negative subscales of the Industrial Relations 2015-01-09T10:33:30Z 2015-01-09T10:33:30Z 2015-01-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/16329 en application/pdf application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
description The aim of the present thesis was to develop and test a process model of the consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors. A review of the literature revealed that conflict and change represent central dimensions of both industrial relations and stress theory. Furthermore, the practice of industrial relations is inherently stressful: Forming a labour-management relationship, joint decision-making, implementing industrial relations decisions and breakdowns in the labour-management relationship are all potentially stressful activities for members of management and labour alike. However, despite the strong theoretical and practical association between industrial relations and stress, no attempt has been made to conduct a comprehensive x vpirical investigation of the stress associated with the practice of industrial relations. Accordingly, in the present thesis, the stress associated with a wide range of industrial relations events was examined. Before investigating the industrial relations stress process, it was necessary to develop an appropriate instrument to measure the stress associated with industrial relations practice. Thus the initial study was aimed at developing the Industrial Relations Event Scale. This was done using the life events approach, a well-documented means of measuring stress. Within the life events paradigm, Sarason's approach has been well-received as it overcomes many of the criticisms levelled against earlier life event scales. Consequently, Sarason's format was adopted for the development of the Industrial Relations Event Scale. The 63-item Industrial Relations Event Scale contains three subscales, the occurrence, negative and positive scales. The occurrence scale assesses retrospectively the number of industrial relations events that have occurred over a 12-month period, As such, the occurrence score provides an index of objective stressors. Subjective measures of stress are provided by the positive and negative subscales of the Industrial Relations
author Bluen, Stephen David
spellingShingle Bluen, Stephen David
Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
author_facet Bluen, Stephen David
author_sort Bluen, Stephen David
title Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
title_short Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
title_full Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
title_fullStr Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
title_full_unstemmed Consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
title_sort consequences and moderators of industrial relations stressors
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/16329
work_keys_str_mv AT bluenstephendavid consequencesandmoderatorsofindustrialrelationsstressors
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