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- Title
"Everything Will Be Fine": A Study on the Relationship between Employees' Perception of Sustainable HRM Practices and Positive Organizational Behavior during COVID19.
- Authors
Manuti, Amelia; Giancaspro, Maria Luisa; Molino, Monica; Ingusci, Emanuela; Russo, Vincenzo; Signore, Fulvio; Zito, Margherita; Cortese, Claudio Giovanni
- Abstract
Sustainable human resource management practices represent one of the main organizational strategy to survive and to prosper within the fast-moving current scenario. According to this view, sustainability is strictly linked to the consideration of the unique and distinctive value that each human resource means for organizations. The recent COVID19 pandemic is having a serious impact on organizations and on their employees, it is profoundly changing the working modalities, mainly introducing smart working practices that were showed to have significant consequences on workers' wellbeing. This study aims to investigate employees' perception of sustainable HRM in the frame of the COVID19 emergency, exploring if and to what extent perceptions of involvement and organizational support together with individual coping strategies associated with organizational change could influence positive organizational behaviors, namely organizational engagement and extra-role behavior. The research involved 549 participants who completed a self-report online questionnaire encompassing psycho-social measures of the abovementioned variables. Results confirmed the important role played by sustainable HRM practices both for the capitalization of human resources and of organizational performance in a time of great uncertainty and global crisis. Implications for theory and HRM practice development were also discussed.
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL behavior; SENSORY perception; ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior; PERSONNEL management; COVID-19; ORGANIZATIONAL change; ORGANIZATIONAL aims &; objectives
- Publication
Sustainability (2071-1050), 2020, Vol 12, Issue 23, p10216
- ISSN
2071-1050
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/su122310216