2015
DOI: 10.1002/hrm.21691
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Demands or Resources? The Relationship Between HR Practices, Employee Engagement, and Emotional Exhaustion Within a Hybrid Model of Employment Relations

Abstract: This article explores the ways in which employees may experience and respond to tensions inherent in the mix of potentially conflicting human resource (HR) practices that compose hybrid models of employment relations. By drawing on the job demands–resources (JD‐R) literature and viewing HR practices as “demands” and “resources,” we explore the impact of performance management and employee voice practices on employee well‐being, as exemplified by engagement and emotional exhaustion, in a large public‐sector org… Show more

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Cited by 163 publications
(187 citation statements)
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References 79 publications
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“…Organizations that intend to prioritize efficiency, therefore simultaneously need to be concerned with maintaining some degree of employee well-being (Peccei et al, 2013), in order to overcome possible risks of putting too much pressure on employees. This is aligned with findings from a recent study demonstrating that the demands presented by the introduction of a performance management system in the Irish public sector were counterbalanced, when employees were simultaneously provided with voice opportunities (Conway, Fu, Monks, Alfes, & Bailey, 2015). In the light of recent organizational and environmental changes in the Dutch Long-Term Care sector, like the focus on quality management, the overkill of registration and the burden of rules and regulations (Slaghuis, 2016), counterbalancing potential negative and positive effects of HRM on well-being is more important than ever (Kowalski et al, 2015).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Organizations that intend to prioritize efficiency, therefore simultaneously need to be concerned with maintaining some degree of employee well-being (Peccei et al, 2013), in order to overcome possible risks of putting too much pressure on employees. This is aligned with findings from a recent study demonstrating that the demands presented by the introduction of a performance management system in the Irish public sector were counterbalanced, when employees were simultaneously provided with voice opportunities (Conway, Fu, Monks, Alfes, & Bailey, 2015). In the light of recent organizational and environmental changes in the Dutch Long-Term Care sector, like the focus on quality management, the overkill of registration and the burden of rules and regulations (Slaghuis, 2016), counterbalancing potential negative and positive effects of HRM on well-being is more important than ever (Kowalski et al, 2015).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…In light of this, there have been calls for more studies that explore the antecedents of these momentary fluctuations in engagement, such as from one situation to another (Bakker, ; Ilies, Aw, & Pluut, ; Saks & Gruman, ). This also aligns with calls for more research on the “lived” experience of engagement that can inform HRM scholarship (Purcell, ; Truss et al, ), for example, how employees' experiences of organisational practices shapes employee behaviour through the state of engagement (Alfes et al, ; Conway, Fu, Monks, Alfes, & Bailey, ; Fletcher, ).…”
supporting
confidence: 58%
“…Many HR systems encourage employee voice (Conway, Fu, Monks, Alfes, & Bailey, ; Wilkinson & Fay, ). The current study reveals that voice and LGO are closely linked.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%