The Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work
Herausgeber: Hoffman, Brian J; Wegman, Lauren A; Shoss, Mindy K
The Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work
Herausgeber: Hoffman, Brian J; Wegman, Lauren A; Shoss, Mindy K
- Gebundenes Buch
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 636
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. April 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 178mm x 35mm
- Gewicht: 1320g
- ISBN-13: 9781108417631
- ISBN-10: 1108417639
- Artikelnr.: 58502686
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Part I. Introduction to the Changing Nature of Work: 1. Introduction Brian
Hoffman, Mindy Shoss and Lauren Wegman; 2. Inappropriate inferences from
generational research David Costanza, Lisa Finkelstein, Ruth Imose and
David Ravid; 3. What has changed and what has not? Kevin Murphy and Warren
Tierney; Part II. What has Changed?: 4. Changes in technology Jerod White,
Tara Behrend and Ian Sidertis; 5. The changing nature of work: a global
perspective Christopher Clott; 6. Changes in occupations, jobs, and skill
polarization Arthur Sakamoto, ChangHwan Kim and Christopher Tamborini; 7.
Changes in the legal landscape Chester Hanvey and Kayo Sady; 8. The rise
and decline of organized labor in the United States: American unions from
Truman to Trump Raymond Hogler; 9. Changes in organizational income
inequality: the causes and consequences Lixin Jiang; 10. Work and
employment in fluid organizational forms Jörg Sydow and Markus Helfen; 11.
Changes in worker demographics Shannon Cheng, Abby Corrington, Eden King,
and Linnea Ng; 12. Generational changes in personality, values and
abilities Jorge Lumbreras and W. Keith Campbell; 13. Changes in work
behavior patterns Sara Jansen Perry, Emily David and Lars Johnson; Part
III. Implications for Talent Management and Impact on Employees: 14.
Implications for selection Brian Lyons, Alexander Alonso, Robert Moorman
and Ashley Miller; 15. Implications of the changing nature of work for
recruitment and retention Wayne Cascio; 16. Performance management and the
changing nature of work Deidra Schleicher and Heidi Baumann; 17.
Implications for training Tiffany Bisbey, Allison Traylor and Eduardo
Salas; 18. Leader behaviors and the changing nature of work John Michel and
Gary Yukl; 19. The changing nature of teams: recommendations for managing
21st century teamwork Justin Jones, Gouri Mohan, Hayley Trainer and Dorothy
Carter; 20. Managing employees across the working lifespan Cort Rudolph and
Hannes Zacher; 21. Implications for employee attitudes and work perceptions
Lauren Wegman and Brian Hoffman; 22. Implications for the interface between
work and nonwork roles Jeffery Greenhaus and Gerry Callanan; 23. The
changing nature of work: implications for employee health and safety Robert
Sinclair, John Morgan and Elyssa Johnson; 24. The dark side of workplace
technology: cyber-related counterproductive work behavior, workplace
mistreatment, and violation of workplace ethics David Howard and Paul
Spector; 25. Implications for the employee-organization relationship Mindy
Shoss, Robert Eisenberger, Juseob Lee, Blaine Lewis, Dustin Maneethai,
Xueqi Wen, Jia Yu and Jimmy Zheng; 26. The future of work Muriel Clauson;
27. Sustainability as a driver of organizational change Lori Foster and
Telma Viale.
Hoffman, Mindy Shoss and Lauren Wegman; 2. Inappropriate inferences from
generational research David Costanza, Lisa Finkelstein, Ruth Imose and
David Ravid; 3. What has changed and what has not? Kevin Murphy and Warren
Tierney; Part II. What has Changed?: 4. Changes in technology Jerod White,
Tara Behrend and Ian Sidertis; 5. The changing nature of work: a global
perspective Christopher Clott; 6. Changes in occupations, jobs, and skill
polarization Arthur Sakamoto, ChangHwan Kim and Christopher Tamborini; 7.
Changes in the legal landscape Chester Hanvey and Kayo Sady; 8. The rise
and decline of organized labor in the United States: American unions from
Truman to Trump Raymond Hogler; 9. Changes in organizational income
inequality: the causes and consequences Lixin Jiang; 10. Work and
employment in fluid organizational forms Jörg Sydow and Markus Helfen; 11.
Changes in worker demographics Shannon Cheng, Abby Corrington, Eden King,
and Linnea Ng; 12. Generational changes in personality, values and
abilities Jorge Lumbreras and W. Keith Campbell; 13. Changes in work
behavior patterns Sara Jansen Perry, Emily David and Lars Johnson; Part
III. Implications for Talent Management and Impact on Employees: 14.
Implications for selection Brian Lyons, Alexander Alonso, Robert Moorman
and Ashley Miller; 15. Implications of the changing nature of work for
recruitment and retention Wayne Cascio; 16. Performance management and the
changing nature of work Deidra Schleicher and Heidi Baumann; 17.
Implications for training Tiffany Bisbey, Allison Traylor and Eduardo
Salas; 18. Leader behaviors and the changing nature of work John Michel and
Gary Yukl; 19. The changing nature of teams: recommendations for managing
21st century teamwork Justin Jones, Gouri Mohan, Hayley Trainer and Dorothy
Carter; 20. Managing employees across the working lifespan Cort Rudolph and
Hannes Zacher; 21. Implications for employee attitudes and work perceptions
Lauren Wegman and Brian Hoffman; 22. Implications for the interface between
work and nonwork roles Jeffery Greenhaus and Gerry Callanan; 23. The
changing nature of work: implications for employee health and safety Robert
Sinclair, John Morgan and Elyssa Johnson; 24. The dark side of workplace
technology: cyber-related counterproductive work behavior, workplace
mistreatment, and violation of workplace ethics David Howard and Paul
Spector; 25. Implications for the employee-organization relationship Mindy
Shoss, Robert Eisenberger, Juseob Lee, Blaine Lewis, Dustin Maneethai,
Xueqi Wen, Jia Yu and Jimmy Zheng; 26. The future of work Muriel Clauson;
27. Sustainability as a driver of organizational change Lori Foster and
Telma Viale.
Part I. Introduction to the Changing Nature of Work: 1. Introduction Brian
Hoffman, Mindy Shoss and Lauren Wegman; 2. Inappropriate inferences from
generational research David Costanza, Lisa Finkelstein, Ruth Imose and
David Ravid; 3. What has changed and what has not? Kevin Murphy and Warren
Tierney; Part II. What has Changed?: 4. Changes in technology Jerod White,
Tara Behrend and Ian Sidertis; 5. The changing nature of work: a global
perspective Christopher Clott; 6. Changes in occupations, jobs, and skill
polarization Arthur Sakamoto, ChangHwan Kim and Christopher Tamborini; 7.
Changes in the legal landscape Chester Hanvey and Kayo Sady; 8. The rise
and decline of organized labor in the United States: American unions from
Truman to Trump Raymond Hogler; 9. Changes in organizational income
inequality: the causes and consequences Lixin Jiang; 10. Work and
employment in fluid organizational forms Jörg Sydow and Markus Helfen; 11.
Changes in worker demographics Shannon Cheng, Abby Corrington, Eden King,
and Linnea Ng; 12. Generational changes in personality, values and
abilities Jorge Lumbreras and W. Keith Campbell; 13. Changes in work
behavior patterns Sara Jansen Perry, Emily David and Lars Johnson; Part
III. Implications for Talent Management and Impact on Employees: 14.
Implications for selection Brian Lyons, Alexander Alonso, Robert Moorman
and Ashley Miller; 15. Implications of the changing nature of work for
recruitment and retention Wayne Cascio; 16. Performance management and the
changing nature of work Deidra Schleicher and Heidi Baumann; 17.
Implications for training Tiffany Bisbey, Allison Traylor and Eduardo
Salas; 18. Leader behaviors and the changing nature of work John Michel and
Gary Yukl; 19. The changing nature of teams: recommendations for managing
21st century teamwork Justin Jones, Gouri Mohan, Hayley Trainer and Dorothy
Carter; 20. Managing employees across the working lifespan Cort Rudolph and
Hannes Zacher; 21. Implications for employee attitudes and work perceptions
Lauren Wegman and Brian Hoffman; 22. Implications for the interface between
work and nonwork roles Jeffery Greenhaus and Gerry Callanan; 23. The
changing nature of work: implications for employee health and safety Robert
Sinclair, John Morgan and Elyssa Johnson; 24. The dark side of workplace
technology: cyber-related counterproductive work behavior, workplace
mistreatment, and violation of workplace ethics David Howard and Paul
Spector; 25. Implications for the employee-organization relationship Mindy
Shoss, Robert Eisenberger, Juseob Lee, Blaine Lewis, Dustin Maneethai,
Xueqi Wen, Jia Yu and Jimmy Zheng; 26. The future of work Muriel Clauson;
27. Sustainability as a driver of organizational change Lori Foster and
Telma Viale.
Hoffman, Mindy Shoss and Lauren Wegman; 2. Inappropriate inferences from
generational research David Costanza, Lisa Finkelstein, Ruth Imose and
David Ravid; 3. What has changed and what has not? Kevin Murphy and Warren
Tierney; Part II. What has Changed?: 4. Changes in technology Jerod White,
Tara Behrend and Ian Sidertis; 5. The changing nature of work: a global
perspective Christopher Clott; 6. Changes in occupations, jobs, and skill
polarization Arthur Sakamoto, ChangHwan Kim and Christopher Tamborini; 7.
Changes in the legal landscape Chester Hanvey and Kayo Sady; 8. The rise
and decline of organized labor in the United States: American unions from
Truman to Trump Raymond Hogler; 9. Changes in organizational income
inequality: the causes and consequences Lixin Jiang; 10. Work and
employment in fluid organizational forms Jörg Sydow and Markus Helfen; 11.
Changes in worker demographics Shannon Cheng, Abby Corrington, Eden King,
and Linnea Ng; 12. Generational changes in personality, values and
abilities Jorge Lumbreras and W. Keith Campbell; 13. Changes in work
behavior patterns Sara Jansen Perry, Emily David and Lars Johnson; Part
III. Implications for Talent Management and Impact on Employees: 14.
Implications for selection Brian Lyons, Alexander Alonso, Robert Moorman
and Ashley Miller; 15. Implications of the changing nature of work for
recruitment and retention Wayne Cascio; 16. Performance management and the
changing nature of work Deidra Schleicher and Heidi Baumann; 17.
Implications for training Tiffany Bisbey, Allison Traylor and Eduardo
Salas; 18. Leader behaviors and the changing nature of work John Michel and
Gary Yukl; 19. The changing nature of teams: recommendations for managing
21st century teamwork Justin Jones, Gouri Mohan, Hayley Trainer and Dorothy
Carter; 20. Managing employees across the working lifespan Cort Rudolph and
Hannes Zacher; 21. Implications for employee attitudes and work perceptions
Lauren Wegman and Brian Hoffman; 22. Implications for the interface between
work and nonwork roles Jeffery Greenhaus and Gerry Callanan; 23. The
changing nature of work: implications for employee health and safety Robert
Sinclair, John Morgan and Elyssa Johnson; 24. The dark side of workplace
technology: cyber-related counterproductive work behavior, workplace
mistreatment, and violation of workplace ethics David Howard and Paul
Spector; 25. Implications for the employee-organization relationship Mindy
Shoss, Robert Eisenberger, Juseob Lee, Blaine Lewis, Dustin Maneethai,
Xueqi Wen, Jia Yu and Jimmy Zheng; 26. The future of work Muriel Clauson;
27. Sustainability as a driver of organizational change Lori Foster and
Telma Viale.