the psychology of work and · pdf fileto add further complexity to the experiences of work,...
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
• Summary
• Introduction
• Cultural & Cross Cultural Aspects of Work
• Women and Work
• Psychological and Health Benefits of Having Work
A Discussion Paper of the Australian Psychological Society Ltd.Prepared by a Working Group consisting of Professor Tony Winefield, Professor Bob Montgomery, Dr Una Gault, Dr Juanita Muller,
Professor John O’Gorman, Associate Professor Joseph Reser, and Dr David Roland, under the auspice of APS Directors of SocialIssues Associate Professor Ann Sanson, Ms Heather Gridley, and Ms Colleen Turner.
Thanks to a number of people who offered comments on the manuscript: Ms Judith Cougle, Ms Sonja Nota, Dr Nick Reynolds, Ms Meredith Fuller, Dr Helen Winefield and members of the APS Board of
Directors.
Copyright The Australian Psychological Society Ltd – June 2000ABN 23 000 543 788
For further information, contact The Australian Psychological Society Ltd on (03) 8662 3300
If you are viewing this document in Acrobat Reader, click on the Quick Index headings below or go to the Table of Contents for a full listing of titles:
PAPER
P O S I T I O N
Work and Unemployment
The Psychology of
in Australia Today
• Psychological and Health Costs of HavingWork Today
• Unpaid Work
• Work in the Future
• References
![Page 2: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Summary
1. Introduction
2. Cultural and Cross Cultural Aspects of Work
3. Women and Work
- emotional work
4. Psychological and Health Benefits of Having Work
- young people
- middle-aged people
- retired people
5. Psychological and Health Costs of Having Work Today:
The Changing Nature of Work
- changes in the workplace
- income inequality
- work-related risks to health and family functioning
- coping with organisational change
6. Unpaid Work
- leisure and recreational activities
- voluntary work
7. Work in the Future
References
![Page 3: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
2
SUMMARY
1. Paid work is typically a major part of life for adults in Western society. Reliable
and secure access to work potentially offers a number of benefits, including an
income (which in turn provides access to desired activities, goods and services),
structured activity, a sense of purposefulness and personal worth, and social
contact.
2. Many traditional ideas about ‘work’ and ‘non-work’ are culture-bound. In
Western cultural contexts the determination of one’s daily activities is accompanied
by a sense of one’s “value” as income earner, provider and responsible - and
successful - member of society.
3. Many ideas about what is work are also gender bound. Despite their increasing
involvement in the workforce, women also usually carry the greater burden of work
in the home; such work is clearly essential but traditionally undervalued. Unpaid
work in the home is not counted as part of the Gross National Product while the
same work, if paid (e.g., cleaning or cooking), is counted.
4. Employed people enjoy better mental health than do unemployed people, and
longitudinal research findings support the conclusion that this is because
employment status affects mental health. However, whether the experience of
work is beneficial or detrimental depends on the quality of the work experience.
The claim that even bad jobs are better for psychological well-being than
unemployment is not supported by research.
5. The provision and nature of work are undergoing marked changes which are
modifying the impact of work so as to reduce or negate its potentially beneficial
effects. There are proportionally fewer full-time and more part-time jobs, and
increasing casual and contract labour, often resulting in adverse impacts on the
![Page 4: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
3
family, on the nature of work experience and on career paths. Job growth has
mainly been at the two ends of the skill spectrum, either professional level jobs or
labouring and service jobs. Downsizing, as well as being emotionally and
economically damaging to retrenched workers, often results in increasing workloads
for remaining workers, with adverse effects on health, psychological well-being, and
productivity.
6. Job loss in middle age has been shown to be even more damaging than
unemployment for the young. Retirement can be beneficial or deleterious,
depending on several factors, particularly health, financial security, and the
individual’s perceived control over the decision. Attitudes towards retirement are
now contradictory, with governmental encouragement for delayed retirement
standing alongside community pressure to leave work to make room for younger
workers.
7. The nature and availability of work, and therefore the impact of the work
experience and the role work plays in life, are inevitably changing and will continue
to do so. At present, these changes are often occurring in ways that are detrimental
to many individuals and to the Australian community. This paper focuses in detail
on the psychological aspects of these changes and their effects, but the solutions to
most of the problems raised will necessarily involve social, economic and political
action.
![Page 5: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
4
1. INTRODUCTION
Paid work is a major activity throughout most of life for most adults in western
society. Full time work occupies a major part of our waking hours. A traditional
notion of work has been that of activity that produces material products or provides
services, activity for which workers usually but not always expect to be paid. Such
simple notions, focussing as they do on the economically productive functions of
work, have always been an inadequate account of the possible functions of work for
the worker. The experience of work has the capacity to be beneficial or detrimental,
both directly and indirectly. Work can provide a sense of achievement, of purpose, of
fulfilment, of personal and social worth, and the earnings from work provide access to
other needed or desired resources, support and experiences. Obligatory activity that
offers few or none of these benefits (‘labour’) may be largely detrimental despite
providing monetary access to other desirable resources.
The experience of seeking and not obtaining work is typically detrimental, often
seriously so; the experience of ceasing work may be beneficial, as in planned
retirement, but is also often detrimental. The experience of unemployment, in one
form or another, is currently all that is realistically available to a sizeable minority of
our community. Another sizeable minority is involved in unpaid work as carers of
children, people with disabilities and people with age related disabilities. Most of this
unpaid caring work is done by women, often in addition to part time or full time paid
work.
To add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement,
the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change, particularly in response to
changing technology and globalisation of industry. The majority of new jobs are being
created at the two ends of the range of complexity, either highly skilled, professional
level jobs or unskilled labouring and service jobs. The former require not only a highly
trained workforce but one which is able continually to update its skills. The latter
![Page 6: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
5
offer work that is more akin to ‘labour’, as defined above, offering little positive
benefit other than an income. These changes will inevitably modify the impact of
work, or the lack of it, on psychological well-being and health, with again the potential
to be beneficial or detrimental.
Psychologists have a strong interest in individual and societal well-being and are thus
drawn to the study of the psychological impact of work and of the lack or loss of
work. The aim of this discussion paper is to summarise the research into the
psychological effects of work, unemployment and retirement, and to consider
strategies for optimising the potential benefits and minimising potential harm.
2. CULTURAL AND CROSS-CULTURAL
ASPECTS OF WORK
Many of our traditional ideas about ‘work’ and ‘nonwork’ are culture-bound.
Westerners live in largely industrialised societies and cultures where there is a clearly
demarcated domain of ‘work’ or ‘gainful employment’ which is highly valued, which
can dramatically impact on individual identity and status, which largely determines
residential location and often education, and which takes up a large part of people’s
lives. The other side of this Western institutionalisation of work and the work ethic is
that not to ‘have work’ is to see oneself as a failure, to have an indeterminate identity
and status, to be perceived as ‘carried’ by the work of others, to be dependent, and to
have an uncertain future. While it can and has been argued that ‘work’ itself simply
differs from culture to culture, with different types of economies, the reality in terms
of cultural assumptions and meaning systems is that the very construct of ‘work’
differs profoundly from culture to culture.
Even in Western European cultures, which are superficially homogenous, work values
differ markedly (e.g., Hofstede, 1980). The domain of work and cultural values is of
particular interest in Australia, given the cultural heterogeneity of the population,
including indigenous people and immigrants, given the high work aspirations of
![Page 7: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
6
migrants, and given a popular conception of Australia overseas to the effect that, in
Australia, people “work to live” as distinct from America and parts of Europe, where
people basically “live to work”. There are also differences across generations, with
Australia’s young people occupying a different cultural space from their parents, and
often having different values with respect to self, life and nature and importance of
work (Frydenberg, 1994).
We need to keep in mind that Western cultural value stances and assumptions are in
part responsible for a number of unfavourable stereotypes with respect to differing
rates of paid employment in other cultural contexts. For example, high rates of
unemployment in Aboriginal communities are regularly cited as negative social
indicators, yet these reflect both pervasive structural inequalities as well as a cultural
value system which is simply very different. While there has been some limited
research on ‘work values’ among indigenous Australians, it has been almost always in
the context of non-Aboriginal and largely Western cultural assumptions and in the
context of community development initiatives aimed at providing an ‘economic base’
and ‘self-sufficiency’, based on values often alien to their culture.
In Western cultures we have tended to isolate and reify ‘work’ as a thing in itself, as a
self-defining life context, as the subject of intellectual and popular discussions, as part
and product of a motivational and economic engine that drives society and progress.
We work at ‘work’ and work at home; it’s what we ‘do’ for a ‘living’. While many
are questioning increasing incompatibilities between having a life and having a career,
what drives and defines the cultural ideal in Australia is a self-defining, self-satisfying
‘job’. These are relatively strange and alien notions in many non-Western cultures,
where ‘work’ is a more integral part of living and being and is not a reflective object of
consideration, study, and cultural elaboration.
A cross-cultural perspective allows us some intellectual purchase on where and how
what we identify as ‘work’ impacts on people’s lives. This is particularly valuable at
![Page 8: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
7
a time when cultures and, indeed, the nature of self and society (e.g., Gergen, 1991;
Sampson, 1989) are changing rapidly. It is true at both ends of the generational
continuum, with many older persons bridging a further generational divide and living
far past the age of ‘retirement’. Such a perspective cautions us against seeing
alternative life styles as necessarily problematic, while at the same time understanding
the self-defining, esteem-providing, and dignity-enhancing dividends that culturally
valued ‘work’ can provide in particular cultural contexts. We clearly need some
different ways of understanding and thinking about ‘work’. We are entering a
millennium in which ‘work’ may become a less central part of who and what people
are. We need to accommodate better new cultural understandings of personhood, and
connections, and of meaning and self-fulfilment. The experience of other cultures
allows us to broaden, redefine and reconstrue (e.g., Davidson & Reser, 1996) the
nature of ‘work’ and its relation to life satisfaction and quality of life.
3. WOMEN AND WORK
There is an established literature, much of it based in women’s studies, on the effects
of women entering the paid work force in increasing numbers over the last twenty to
thirty years. (e.g., Bryson, 1994; Mumford, 1989; Ryan & Conlon, 1989). By 1992
women made up more than 40 percent of the Australian workforce and 75 percent of
the part time work force. (ABS, 1993). So widespread and usual is women’s
participation in the paid work force that unless other wise specified, this paper
applies to both male and female workers and male and female unemployed people.
However, because women are a clear majority of part time and casual workers, many
of the psychologically stressful effects of low paid unskilled work disproportionately
impact on women workers. Most women work in the service sector, in jobs that are
often treated as “natural extensions of their domestic roles and therefore devalued”
(Bryson, 1994).
![Page 9: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
8
There are additional issues relevant to women, particularly those women who are
carers of children, of disabled spouses and elderly parents (in-law). Despite the large
increase in the number of women in the workforce, they are still likely to carry the
burden of work at home, and are more likely than their partners to be caring for sick
and/or ageing relatives. Although men are more likely to acknowledge the desirability
of sharing domestic work, this increasing acknowledgment achieves at best partial
expression in practice (Goodnow & Bowes, 1994), with the consequence that women
may often have to cope with two or three jobs, with even less time for other activities,
including self-care. Family structures themselves are diversifying, with more
households comprising a female parent and child(ren) only or other structures which
differ from the traditional nuclear family. Work-family conflict and family-work
conflict can interact reciprocally to the detriment of activities in both areas as well as
to the worker caught between competing demands (Fallon, 1997). Employers often
do not recognise the possibility of work performance being diminished when problems
at home are ignored. There is also commonly a lack of recognition of cultural
differences in such areas as observance of family obligations.
The related effect of over-demanding work hours is to limit the paid work possibilities
for those who are expected also to carry the main burden of work at home, especially
of child-rearing. Once again the effect of this can be that primary care-givers,
predominantly but not exclusively women, tend to be excluded from better quality
work and restricted to work, such as piece work or outwork, that may demand longer
hours to meet quotas, but is unreliable in supply. Work that does allow for
commitment to the family often does not offer career progression (Poole & Langan-
Fox, 1997).
Emotional work
Emotional work refers to all the time- and energy-consuming activities which help
others to regulate their emotional states (e.g., peace-keeping and social skills training
![Page 10: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
9
with children, negotiation of needs for dependent ageing relatives, building cohesion in
family and workplace units). When women engage in such activities they are usually
unpaid, although such work is vital to the harmony and effective psychological
functioning of many communities and their individual members (Strazdins, 2000).
Until the age of 60 women outnumber men as carers, reaching a peak in numbers about
age 50 (Phillipson, 1982). Most of these, if no longer caring for children now grown
up, care for spouses, ageing parents or handicapped relatives. Overall, women are
more likely to be carers than men, but after age 60 caring for partners predominates,
with slightly more men than women likely to be the “principal resident carers”
(Fallon, 1997; McCallum & Geiselhart, 1996). The work of caring for disabled
relatives can be isolating and burdensome. Greater recognition from professional
carers, and more training and support resources, are some of the policy initiatives
which might increase family caregivers’ satisfaction from this work (Winefield, H.,
2000).
Except in rare instances (such as the payment of a ‘stipend’ by a husband to a wife)
work in the home is not regarded as paid work in the same way as is outsourced
domestic labour (e.g., housekeeper, cleaning service). The latter is included in
estimates of Gross National Product (GNP), whereas the former is not. Although
much work in the home is tedious, repetitive, and laborious (in spite of technological
innovations), much familial work involves elements of benefit to others, interpersonal
“caring” and reciprocity that are not demanded to the same extent by any other
workplace (Goodnow & Bowes, 1994).
Surveys in Australia (Bittman, 1991, 1994) indicate that women spend more time on
work in and about the home than men, in some studies more than four times as much
as men. A common pattern often reported is the division of household work into
‘outside’ (car, garden, repairs) and ‘inside’ (everything else), with occasional sharing
of shopping and child-care. The patterns of engagement by men and women in
![Page 11: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
10
household work are, however, changing (Bittman, 1994). Women are cutting back on
time spent in the kitchen and laundry and are contributing more of their time to
traditional male “outside” duties. Men are spending less time in unpaid tasks than
women still do, but are spending more time on child care.
Research has shown that Australian couples who share housework and were prepared
to change conventional work roles attributed their success to flexibility, appropriate
styles of ‘talk’, and ability to negotiate and ‘see another’s point of view’ (Goodnow
& Bowes, 1994). Equity, sharing, and turning a united face to the world were
common values enunciated by the partners.
4. PSYCHOLOGICAL AND HEALTH BENEFITS
OF HAVING WORK
Young people
Middle-aged people
Retired people
Having reliable and secure access to paid work is potentially very beneficial. The
beneficial effects of work are most clearly demonstrated by considering the deleterious
effects of not having work. The mental health of unemployed people is poorer than
the mental health of people in paid employment, and longitudinal research suggests
that unemployment is the cause (Winefield, 1995).
Whether the adverse psychological impact of unemployment is due solely to its
financial consequences or whether it also depends on the loss of the other potential
benefits of work is not yet clear. As well as providing income, work structures the
day, provides social contact, a sense of purposefulness, identity and status, and
enforces activity (Jahoda, 1981). On the one hand, studies in the USA have reported
that the consequent financial strain is the only factor affecting psychological health in
![Page 12: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
11
unemployed people (Kessler, Turner, & House, 1987) and similar results have been
reported in the UK (Rodgers, 1991) and in the Netherlands (Schaufeli & Van Yperen,
1992). On the other hand, research in Sweden has shown considerable psychological
and health strains associated with job loss, even though job losers receive a benefit of
90% of their previous net income during the first year of unemployment (Kieselbach
& Svensson, 1988).
An important reservation regarding the impact of work concerns the quality of the
experience of work. Although it has been claimed that even bad jobs are preferable to
unemployment (e.g., Jahoda, 1981), this claim is not supported by relevant research
evidence (Feather, 1990; Warr, 1987; Winefield, Tiggemann, Winefield, & Goldney,
1993). On the contrary, there is now convincing evidence that, particularly for young
people, unsatisfactory employment is no better than unemployment. Moreover,
studies of mature-age job losers have shown that, although 90% of retrenched workers
report a decline in mental or physical health, the remaining 10% report an
improvement. The improvement is usually associated with leaving a job that was
extremely stressful, mentally or physically (Warr & Jackson, 1987).
Fryer and Winefield (1998) have suggested that unemployment may be regarded as
equivalent to highly stressful employment: “Unemployed people can…be regarded as
involuntary, poorly paid, low status, insecure, public service workers with virtually
no negotiating rights, whose work (persistent hopeless search for nonexistent jobs,
managing households on inadequate resources and participating in humiliating
bureaucratic rituals) carries massive risk of occupational strain” (p.3). Occupational
stress is discussed further in the next section.
In considering the importance of work throughout the lifespan, it is important to
recognise broader understandings of ‘work’ which build and foster a natural continuum
from adolescence to adulthood to senior citizenship, in which work, in its broadest
sense, plays an integral role. Family and community involvements may provide many
![Page 13: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
12
of the psychological benefits of work. where those responsibilities are freely chosen
and appropriately valued as essential to the functioning of society.
Young people
For young people the gaining of employment, particularly in a position which is
valued and involving, symbolically represents entry into a mature, adult world of
responsibilities, freedom and respect. Entry into this adult world is more difficult for
those who have not been able to make this symbolic transition to paid work and the
adult world it represents.
Several Australian longitudinal studies have looked at the psychological effects of
failing to find employment in school leavers (Feather & O’Brien, 1986; Gurney, 1980;
Patton & Noller, 1990; Winefield et al., 1993). Because young people, particularly
school leavers, are usually no worse off financially than they were at school, they
offer the possibility of studying the effects of failure to find work without the
confounding effects of loss of previous income.
The main effect is that those who leave school and find satisfactory employment
show a marked psychological improvement, whereas those who leave school and fail
to find satisfactory employment show no change. The negative effects of
unemployment on the psychological health of young people have been well
documented in the USA (Prause & Dooley, 1997), the UK (Patterson, 1997), Spain
(Garcia Rodriguez, 1997), the Netherlands (Schaufeli, 1997), Ireland (Hannan, O’Riain
& Whelan, 1997), and Sweden (Hammarström & Janlert, 1997). The most reasonable
inference from all these longitudinal studies is that a causal link exists between youth
unemployment and psychological ill-health.
There is evidence that the way young people use their spare time can moderate the
negative effects of unemployment and unsatisfactory employment. Leisure activities
![Page 14: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
13
that involve interacting with other people in some purposeful activity have
psychological benefits for young people who are unemployed or employed in
unsatisfactory jobs (Winefield, Tiggemann & Winefield, 1992). However, leisure
activities are not associated with psychological well-being in young people who are
engaged in full time study (secondary or tertiary) or those employed in satisfactory
jobs. A recently commissioned study has shown that participation in Work for the
Dole projects had some ongoing psychological benefits, although it had no apparent
effect on self-esteem or work involvement (Winefield, 1999).
Middle-aged people
Job loss in middle or later age has been found to be more damaging than
unemployment for the young in two Australian studies, both of which made direct
comparisons (Broomhall & Winefield, 1990; Rowley & Feather, 1987). In the first of
these studies, the younger and older groups were matched for unemployment duration
so this factor was eliminated as a possible confounding variable. The greater impact of
unemployment in middle age is thought to be because of its much greater effect on
lifestyle, finances, and health (Barling, 1990).
Even the anticipation of possible job loss, a common experience within organisations
undergoing rationalisation or downsizing, can be so debilitating for some that it may be
masking some of the impact of actual job loss (Kasl & Cobb, 1979). By the time a
worker is actually retrenched, much of the damage may already have been done and
the certainty of job loss may be a relief compared to long-term uncertainty.
Organisations engaged in downsizing need to take more realistic account of the costs
of the demoralisation of workers, even those who eventually retain their jobs (Cascio,
1995).
![Page 15: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
14
Retired people
Retirement is not necessarily a deleterious experience, particularly when it is
voluntary and the retiree has been able to achieve reasonable financial security and
retain good health (Beehr, 1986; Talaga & Beehr, 1989). Retirement has been shown
to have negative psychological effects only when it is involuntary (Swan, Dame, &
Carmelli, 1991). Forced redundancy for people who, because of age, are unlikely to
obtain work again, is typically deleterious. Retirees without adequate financial
support, particularly those totally dependent on government pensions, are at risk of
the effects of poverty.
People in less rewarding, more onerous employment may look forward to the
‘liberation’ of retirement years but may find themselves with fewer resources,
material, social and psychological, with which to enjoy it (Phillipson, 1982).
Involvement in a new interest such as hobbies or travel, or even the narrowing and
simplification of previous life patterns, may result in disappointment in the face of
increasing infirmity or ill health in the retiree or a partner (Birren, 1996; Phillipson,
1982).
Family relationships may be disrupted or changed when one partner, typically the
man, moves into retirement (Birren, 1996). Many women may be pressured out of
employment they enjoy by partners in retirement who, on average, are older and want
their companionship at home, in travel or other recreation. If the partner does not
adapt to retirement, he may interfere with and dominate domestic routines. An
enforced increase in intimacy may unsettle the relationship. Some factors which have
an impact on adjustment in retirement include people’s previous adjustment at various
stages in their relationship, past coping styles as individuals and in concert with
others, and the benefits of retirement for the individual and for a couple relationship,
such as more shared activities and less stress from competing commitments (Ferguson,
1997). Some retired men spend more time out of the home and seek the
![Page 16: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
15
companionship of peers in clubs or with former workmates. Others may increasingly
share or take on many of the domestic duties, especially if their partner is becoming
frail, or remains in employment.
Retirement may pose different challenges for women than for men. These include
income security and the threat of poverty, the lack of retirement planning, the
expectation of caring, and the greater stress of life events, including loss of partner
through death or divorce (Secombe & Lee, 1986; Szinovacz & Washo, 1992). These
issues may underlie the finding that compared to working men, women in paid
employment were more resistant to retirement. More recent American research (e.g.,
Deitch, 1996) indicates that many older women simply cannot afford to retire,
especially those who have remained ‘uncoupled’.
A study of high achieving women found little evidence of low work commitment
among women approaching retirement years (Onyx & Benton, 1995). Already
reaching their sixties, these women acknowledged that they had not thought about or
planned, or been able adequately to provide for, financial security in retirement. Very
few women, even among the ‘high flyers’ could afford to retire completely.
The majority of women in Australia are now part-time workers and many entered or
reentered the work-force after raising children to school age in the home. The age
disparity (on average, women are five years younger than their spouses) may mean
that women in their fifties who are reaching their peak in effectiveness, productivity,
and earning capacity may find themselves pressured to retire prematurely with their
retiring spouses. Such disparities are now being recognised by abolition of a
compulsory retirement age for both men and women.
There are contradictions in present retirement policy. “It appears. . . that older
people are coming under increasing pressure both to continue working in order to be
self sufficient (hence the removal of mandatory retirement), and to stop working in
![Page 17: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
16
order to make room for younger cohorts. In the case of high profile, high paid older
women, the pressure is to work enormous hours under stressful conditions, and
simultaneously, to get out of the workforce altogether” (Onyx & Benton, 1995, p. 79).
5. PSYCHOLOGICAL AND HEALTH COSTS OF HAVING
WORK TODAY: THE CHANGING NATURE OF WORK
Changes in the workplace
Income inequality
Work-related risks to health and family functioning
Coping with organisational change
There are major changes occurring today in various aspects of work, all of which are
modifying the impact of the work experience. First, the workforce is increasing in
diversity and complexity. The domination of the workforce by men is declining, and
there is an increase in the proportion of women and people from ethnic minorities in
the workforce. The Australian population is becoming increasingly educated. School
retention rates have increased dramatically within the last two decades. Second, there
is a relative decrease in the number of full-time jobs and a relative increase in the
number of part-time jobs available. There is also an increasing reliance upon casual and
contract labour. Third, the increased number of women participating in the workforce
means there are also many more dual-career couples. And fourth, those employed
full-time are working longer hours. according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. It
remains to be seen whether this trend can be reversed in France, the world’s fourth
largest economy, where the government recently enacted laws restricting the working
week to 35 hours. (Even if the French succeed, it is difficult to see how overworked
professionals whose working hours are not recorded might benefit.)
There is a shrinking supply of paid work compared to the growing numbers of people
seeking it. There appears to be inevitable environmental limits to the growth of
![Page 18: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
17
national and global economics. Economic growth occurs fitfully and unreliably, and
does not always result in a proliferation of job opportunities. It has been some time
since traditionally defined full time and permanent jobs are available for all who want
them.
Changes in the workplace
The nature of the workplace is changing. Technological advance has introduced
computers, telecommunication systems, robotics, and flexible manufacturing
operations. There is a decreasing reliance on direct human labour while at the same
time productivity is increasing. Routine tasks are increasingly being performed by
automation, freeing employees to take on more varied and challenging tasks. This
means that employees’ skills are becoming obsolete more quickly, necessitating an
increasing focus on continuing training and education.
Ironically, technological change in the workplace often means that there is an
increasing amount of poor quality work – ‘work not fit for a machine to do’ –
available for human workers. This is ‘labour’, work that is unsatisfying, offering low
pay and low job security, with variable and unreliable hours. Often it is this work –
such as house-cleaning, waitressing and casual clerical work - which is predominantly
undertaken by women and cultural minorities. Many jobs in the fast-expanding
service sector require workers to adopt a smiling and friendly manner to consumers
which makes demands similar to those involved in ‘emotional work’ (see Section 3,
Women and Work).
Under the influence of economic rationalism, work force numbers have been reduced,
although the amount of work to be done often has not. The resulting increases in
workload and in job insecurity have deleterious effects on both the remaining workers
and the organisation. The stress of overwork can lead to psychological problems,
including depression, burnout and breakdowns, to health problems, including heart
attacks and hypertension, and to organisational problems, including workplace
![Page 19: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
18
violence or accidents (Quick, Quick, Nelson, & Hurrell, 1997). All of these problems
can result in increased costs to the organisation which cancel out the short-term cost-
savings made by downsizing, resulting in no real improvement in long-term
profitability (Cascio, 1995).
Income inequality
Associated with the growing gap between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ jobs has been an increase
in income inequality. Wilkinson (1996) has argued from international epidemiological
statistics that increased income inequality has negative health consequences (reduced
life expectancy) for all members of society – both rich and poor - and he proposes
that the underlying mechanism for this is the breakdown of social cohesion which
characterises “healthy egalitarian societies”. In such societies, according to Wilkinson,
there is “ a strong community life”; and “people are more likely to be involved in
social and voluntary activities outside the home” (p. 4).
Wilkinson’s conclusions have been criticised by Catalano (1998) who argues that the
epidemiological case is weak and that the main cause of concern should be growing
economic insecurity, even among the more affluent. (He points out that a 1996 US
survey found that 37% of American households reported that they were
‘economically insecure’ and 43% with an annual income of more than $50,000 feared
that one of their members would be laid off in the next three years.) Another criticism
of Wilkinson’s thesis is that he puts forward no evidence, other than anecdotal, to
support the view that increased income inequality leads to a breakdown in social
cohesion.
Work-related risks to health and family functioning
The increased costs of occupational stress in the form of absenteeism, reduced
productivity, compensation claims, health insurance and medical expenses has led to a
![Page 20: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
19
growing interest by researchers into its causes, both in Australia and internationally
(e.g. Cooper & Payne, 1988; Cotton, 1995; Dollard & Winefield, 1996; 1998; Quick,
Murphy & Hurrell, 1992). Even jobs traditionally regarded as relatively stress-free,
such as university teaching, are becoming increasingly stressful (Winefield, A., 2000).
Two apparently opposite trends in work practices seem to have similarly deleterious
health effects. Many people in full-time employment are under pressure to work
increasingly longer hours. Many people in part-time or casual employment are
obliged to accept reduced work hours and conditions. Japanese researchers found that
men who worked 11 hours a day had around 2.5 times greater risk of a heart attack
than men working an 8 hour day, while men working less than 6 hours a day had
nearly three times the risk of a heart attack compared to those working an 8 hour day
(Sokejima & Kagamimori, 1998). It is possible those working low hours were doing
so because they were already suffering from the stress of too high a work load, but
underemployment brings its own stresses.
Both men and women in paid work are finding less time available for their
relationships, for their families, and for recreational or social activities. Even those
who have quality jobs may be losing much of the potential benefit because of the
greater demands of work and the resulting imbalance in lifestyle.
Coping with organisational change
The increasing globalisation of the Australian economy means that we are more
economically exposed to events taking place in other countries. Globalisation has
meant increased competition and opportunity for Australian business. Successful
businesses are the ones that can best adapt in response to competition. Being able to
adapt means relying on a flexible workforce that manages change successfully. Yet
people are generally more comfortable continuing to work in accustomed ways.
People have an understandable need for job security and, because of the fear of job
![Page 21: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
20
loss, tend to resist rationalisation, new technologies, and new procedures.
Organisations may resist change because of group inertia and the threat that change
poses to established modes of decision making. Negative reactions to change,
especially imposed change, include distress in the form of anxiety and depression,
decreased job satisfaction, decreased organisational commitment, resistance to change,
deterioration in organisational morale, reduced job performance, increased voluntary
resignations, and absenteeism (Collins, 1998).
There is now abundant evidence identifying the key role played by open
communication in successfully managing organisational and workplace changes.
Traditional management preferences for hierarchical and secretive decision-making
create an environment for gossip and rumour-mongering, which have demoralising
effects on workers. Informing workers openly and fully, even of problems facing an
organisation, facilitates their participation in solving those problems and coming to
terms with necessary changes (Gowing, Kraft, & Quick, 1997). There is little
evidence however of an increase in open communication surrounding workplace
change. In recent highly public workplace changes (the 1998 waterfront dispute for
example), there has been a continued use of secretive and autocratic decision making.
The increasingly global economy may increase this trend as decisions about workplace
closures are made outside of the plant or section that is to be closed.
The continually changing face and nature of work today requires adaptive coping
strategies which allow for easier and anticipated transitions from one type of work to
another, in a context of life-long learning and change. This may entail less dependence
on defining who one is exclusively in terms of what one does “for a living”.
The traditional practice of obtaining one job for life is disappearing and it is
increasingly the pattern of employment for one person to have a sequence of jobs,
which may differ in skill requirements, with possible periods of unemployment in
between. There is, therefore, a need for young people to learn work-related skills, but
these are increasingly likely to be generic skills rather than preparation for a particular
![Page 22: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
21
job. These skills would require them to view change as an inevitable part of life. This
would entail seeing job security as a readiness and an ability to adapt rather than
expecting to learn a certain set of skills which will guarantee life-long employment.
The nature of employment in Australia in the future will require a readiness on the
part of employees to manage change both while in the workforce and when moving in
and out of employment. Research has revealed several factors that influence people’s
ability to cope with change. Different styles of coping are required as a function of
situation, time and person - that is, what works in one situation may not work in
another. A distinction is often made between problem-focussed coping and emotion-
focussed coping (Kinicki, McKee, & Wade, 1996). Persons employing problem-
focussed coping are likely to deal with the stressful situation by taking action that
directly helps to find a solution to the problem being faced. For a person who is
unemployed, this might mean taking steps to re-skill or to apply for new positions.
A person employing emotion-focussed coping is likely to deal with personal feelings
and reactions to the problem and may avoid solving it. The second strategy may be
less adaptive in an unstable employment market and is more likely to lead to related
health problems. However, emotion-focussed coping may be more effective than
problem-focussed coping when a situation cannot be changed, such as a bereavement.
For some job-seekers, this may be a realistic assessment of the employment market.
Research has suggested that those who are more likely to use problem-focussed
coping are characterised by a greater sense of optimism and sense of mastery
(Armstrong-Stassen, 1994). Optimism can be defined as a generalised expectancy that
good things will happen. Sense of mastery can be described as having a belief that
one’s life chances are under one’s own control in contrast to being determined by fate.
A person with a strong sense of mastery and high level of optimism is likely to
approach change in a positive way. In addition, employees with these characteristics
are likely to exhibit a high level of work commitment, even in the face of uncertainty.
![Page 23: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
22
Is it possible to increase the level of optimism and sense of mastery that people
possess? An individual’s attitude to life and work, in particular, is influenced by
personal upbringing, dispositional traits, life experiences and cultural factors.
Research has shown that children whose disposition tends towards the pessimistic
can be guided into thinking more optimistically (Seligman, 1997). However, the
development of such an optimistic stance requires some opportunity to experience a
sense of mastery. Our young people have a basic right to reasonable levels of respect,
support and security within which a realistic “can-do” attitude can be fostered,
particularly during transitional periods such as leaving school.
Finally, one way for the Australian Psychological Society to encourage organisations
to reduce workplace stress might be to follow the lead of the New Jersey
Psychological Association (NJPA) which, in 1999, initiated a “Psychologically
Healthy Workplace Award” scheme (Chamberlin, 1999). NJPA looked for companies
that offered:
¬ programs that enable employees to provide feedback and evaluate job satisfaction;
¬ options such as flexible time, child care and leave time for family health needs;
¬ professional development opportunities, tuition reimbursement or career
counselling;
¬ programs on topics such as workplace violence, substance use and grief
counselling.
![Page 24: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
23
6. UNPAID WORK
Leisure and recreational activities
The boundaries between ‘work’ and ‘leisure’ are becoming blurred. Paid work is not
available for many who want it and the nature of work is changing for many, due to
the shorter working hours in new contractual arrangements, reflecting the increase in
part-time and casual work. For many people leisure time has increased due to these
changes in work, the impact of domestic technologies, and flexibility in retirement
ages. Consequently, the relative importance of leisure in people’s lives is likely to
increase (Gershuny, 1994).
To what extent can leisure pursuits substitute for work? Winefield et al. (1992), as
noted earlier, found that those who cope best with unemployment are those engaged
in purposeful activity and who maintain regular contact with people outside the
nuclear family. The purposeful use of spare time may play a buffering role in coping
with the stresses of both unemployment and unsatisfactory employment.
Unemployed people who spend time in active leisure pursuits or voluntary work
outside the home or on work-related activities such as training and education have
better mental health than unemployed people who do not engage in these activities
(Creed, Hicks, & Machin, 1996; Fryer, 1986; Kilpatrick & Trew, 1985; Muller,
Delahaye, Winocur, & Hicks, 1996).
Although these studies emphasise the positive effects of activity on mental health,
they do not indicate that other activities are a substitute for work. Rather, they are
highlighting the positive relationship between activity and mental health. Some,
however, consider that serious leisure activities can substitute for work, in that they
offer the opportunity to individuals to express their abilities, fulfil their potential, and
identify themselves as unique human beings (Stebbins, 1982).
![Page 25: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
24
Serious leisure pursuits include amateur activities in art, science, sport or
entertainment, hobbyist pursuits including collecting, making things or tinkering,
participating in activities such as bodybuilding, surfing, fishing, or playing sports or
games, or carer volunteering as in community projects and services. The education
system should teach people how to be amateurs, hobbyists, or volunteers, as well as
how to fill jobs, because they will need these skills in our post-industrial society
(Stebbins, 1982).
Voluntary work
Health and satisfaction are affected by volunteer activity for both men and women
(Dorfman & Rubenstein, 1993; Metzer et al, 1997). In retirement years, for example,
many women, especially those who have been employed in the home throughout
marriage, continue a range of volunteer activity. But a significant number of men also
do voluntary work. Given the research support for the association between active and
purposeful use of time and positive mental health, people should be encouraged to
prepare for and value unpaid activities. Whether unpaid activity can be a substitute
for work or whether work should be redefined to include some socially useful unpaid
activity is still being debated. However, lack of money to engage in and plan for
purposeful and meaningful leisure activities is a major problem for unemployed
people and consequently, unless policies for encouragement of such activities are
developed, they may be denied access to the positive mental health outcomes
associated with participation in such activities (Fryer & Fagan, 1993).
Such considerations are becoming part of Government policy in Australia, the United
States and the United Kingdom. In its interim report on welfare reform (Participation
Support for a More Equitable Society, March 2000), a reference group set up by the
Australian Federal Department of Family and Community Services outlined a system
for encouraging recipients of Disability Support Benefit and Parenting Support
Benefit to take part in either paid work or unpaid community activities. The report
![Page 26: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
25
uses a framework of “Mutual Obligation” to expand on how incentives and
disincentives might be used to increase participation in the paid or voluntary labour
markets. Incentives include a range of financial incentives and more personalised
assistance with accessing opportunities for paid or voluntary work. Disincentives
include reduction or cessation of benefits. A central feature of the proposed reforms
is the mandatory nature of participation and associated tests and activities. There has
been widespread debate about the potential impact of making participation
mandatory, but as yet little or no outcome research for individuals, groups and the
community.
7. WORK IN THE FUTURE
Australians today are faced with a number of difficult questions, with far-reaching
consequences, regarding the nature, provision and expectations of work in our society.
Under the prevailing ethos of economic rationalism, there has been an increasingly
narrow focus on the economically productive role of work, to the neglect and even at
the cost of the other potential benefits of the experience of work. If the supply of
paid work continues to be shared inequitably, a large number of people have little or
no access to it and therefore to its potential benefits. Some people are offered work,
potentially the better quality of work, but in ways that negate its possible benefits.
Others are offered work that is mostly ‘labour’, with little or no benefit other than an
income, and it is offered in ways that do not provide work security or the possibility
of a career.
If the supply of economically productive work is already insufficient to provide full-
time work for all who want it, and if that discrepancy is likely to grow rather than
shrink, society needs to make considered decisions regarding the distribution of
economically productive work. If we provide it in full-time jobs to a fortunate section
of society, we create and maintain an unfortunate section who will experience
unemployment or underemployment, frequently or permanently. Given the
![Page 27: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
26
established adverse effects of unwanted unemployment reviewed in this paper, do we
then take steps to protect the unemployed from those effects and the whole of
society from the wider adverse effects?
Should schools be asked to teach young people to cope with unemployment and/or
underemployment and a consequential low-income life-style? Teachers have generally
resisted such efforts as stereotyping and encouraging low expectations, yet skills
relevant to productive and psychologically satisfying life without major paid work
may be required.
If economically productive work is shared more equitably, meaning more job-seekers
are given access to less than full-time work, several further questions arise. Do we
accept a consequent lowering of expectations of standards of living because of
lowering incomes? This would be very much at odds with the ethos of a consumerist
society. And how do we provide working conditions offering a degree of security
conducive to the ‘great Australian dream’ of home ownership, or consistent with
pressures to take out private health insurance or superannuation for financial
independence in retirement?
If work has been a major source of other than economically productive benefits – the
benefits of purposeful activity, achievement, personal and social worth – and the
supply of work is to be rationed, do we take steps to make available other means of
obtaining those additional benefits? This would involve a re-evaluation of recreational
activities and better preparation for successful, life-long participation in them.
If the technology of work is changing, do we revise our preparation for work to have a
greater focus on generic skills, especially interpersonal skills and the skills and
attitudes for coping with change? If career expectations are increasingly of a series of
jobs, perhaps punctuated by periods of unemployment, do we take steps to prepare
young people for such a career pattern as a positive expectation? How do we
![Page 28: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
27
reconcile such expectations with invitations to take a lifespan responsibility for one’s
income provisions through periods of work, non-work and in the transitions?
Psychologists, with their expertise in mental health measurement and statistical and
research design issues, together with their understanding of organisational behaviour
and the psychological effects of unemployment and occupational stress, have an
important role to play in advising policy-makers on how to promote a
psychologically healthy and productive work (and non-work) environment for all
Australians.
![Page 29: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
28
REFERENCES
Australian Bureau of Statistics (1993). Women in Australia. Canberra: AGPS.
Barling, J. (1990). Employment, stress and family functioning. Chchester: Wiley.
Beehr, T. A. (1986). The process of retirement: A review and recommendations for
future investigation. Personnel Psychology, 39, 31-55.
Birren, J. E. (1996). Retirement can open up a wealth of opportunities. APA
Monitor, December, 37.
Bittman, M. (1991) Juggling time: How Australian families use time. Canberra: Office
of the Status of Women, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
Bittman, M. (1994). The more things change, the more they remain the same.
International Year of the Family Conference. Reported in The Australian, 23
November, 1994
Broomhall, H. S., & Winefield, A. H. (1990). A comparison of the affective well-being
of young and middle-aged unemployed men matched for length of
unemployment. British Journal of Medical Psychology, 63, 43-52.
Bryson, L. (1994). Women, paid work and social policy. In N. Grieve, & A. Burns
(Eds.), Australian women: Contemporary feminist thought. Melbourne:
Oxford University Press.
Cascio, W. F. (1995). A guide to responsible restructuring. Washington: US
Government Printing Office.
Catalano, R. (1998). An epidemiological perspective: Review of Unhealthy societies
by Wilkinson, R.G. (1996). Journal of Community and Applied Social
Psychology, 8, 165-168.
Chamberlin, J. (1999). New Jersey award honors companies for taking stress out of
work. APA Monitor, December, 9.
Collins, D. (1998). Organisational change: Sociological perspectives. London:
Routledge.
Cooper, C.L. & Payne, R. (1988). Causes, coping and consequences of stress at work.
Chichester: Wiley.
![Page 30: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
29
Cotton, P. (Ed.) (1995). Psychological health in the workplace. Melbourne: Australian
Psychological Society.
Creed, P. A., Hicks, R., & Machin, T. (1996). The effect of psychosocial training
climate on mental health outcomes for long term unemployed individuals.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Vocational Education Research, 4, 26-
41.
Davidson, G., & Reser, J. P. (1996). Construing and constructs: Personal and cultural?
In B.M. Walker, J. Costigan, L.L. Viney, & B. Warren (Eds.), Personal
construct theory: A Psychology for the future. (pp. 105-128). Melbourne:
Australian Psychological Society.
Deitch, I. (1996). Retiring poses different challenges for women. APA Monitor,
December, 34.
Department of Family and Community Services (2000). Participation support for a
more equitable society: The interim report of the Reference Group on Welfare
Reform. Author: Canberra.
Dollard, M.F., & Winefield, A.H. (1996). Managing occupational stress: A national
and international perspective. International Journal of Stress Management, 3,
69-83.
Dollard, M.F. & Winefield, A.H. (1998). A test of the demands-control/support
model of work stress in correctional officers. Journal of Occupational Health
Psychology, 3, 243-264.
Dorfman, L. T., & Rubenstein, L. M. (1993). Paid and unpaid activities and
retirement satisfaction among rural seniors. Physical and Occupational
Therapy in Geriatrics. 12, 45-63.
Fallon, B. J. (1997). The balance between paid work and home responsibilities:
personal problem or private concern? Australian Psychologist, 32, 1-9.
Feather, N. T. (1990). The psychological impact of unemployment. New York:
Springer.
![Page 31: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
30
Feather, N. T., & O’Brien, G. E. (1986). A longitudinal study of the effects of
employment and unemployment on school-leavers. Journal of Occupational
Psychology, 59, 121-144.
Frydenberg, E. (1994). Coping with different concerns: Consistency and variation in
coping strategies used by adolescents. Australian Psychologist, 29, 45-48.
Fryer, D. (1986). Employment deprivation and personal agency during
unemployment. Social Behaviour, 1, 3-23.
Fryer, D., & Fagan, R. (1993). Coping with unemployment. International Journal of
Political Economy, 23, 95-120.
Fryer, D.M. & Winefield, A.H. (1998). Employment stress and unemployment
distress as two varieties of labour market induced psychological strain: an
explanatory framework. Australian Journal of Social Research, 5, 3-18.
Garcia Rodriguez, Y. (1997). Learned helplessness of expectancy - value? A
psychological model for describing the experiences of different categories of
unemployed people. Journal of Adolescence, 20, 321-332.
Gergen, K. J. (1991). The saturated self: Dilemmas of identity in contemporary life.
New York: Basic Books.
Gershuny, J. (1994). The psychological consequences of unemployment: An
assessment of the Jahoda thesis. In D. Gallie, C. Marsh, & C. Vogler (Eds.),
Social change and the experience of unemployment. (pp.213-230). London:
Oxford University Press.
Goodnow, J. J., & Bowes, J. M. (1994). Men, women and household work. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Gowing, M.K., Kraft, J.D., & Quick, J.C. (1997). The new organizational reality:
Downsizing, restructuring and revitalization. Washington: APA Books.
Gurney, R. M. (1980). Does unemployment affect the self-esteem of school leavers?
Australian Journal of Psychology, 32, 175-182.
Hammarström, A., & Janlert, U.(1997). Nervous and depressive symptoms in a
longitudinal study of youth unemployment - selection or exposure? Journal of
Adolescence, 20, 293-306.
![Page 32: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
31
Hannan, D. F., O’Riain, S., & Whelan, C. T. (1997). Youth unemployment and
psychological distress in the Republic of Ireland. Journal of Adolescence, 20,
307-320.
Hofstede, G. (1980). Culture’s consequences: International differences in work-related
values. Beverly Hills, CA.:Sage.
Jahoda, M. (1981). Work, employment and unemployment: Values, theories and
approaches in social research. American Psychologist, 36, 184-191.
Kasl, S.V., & Cobb, S. (1979). Some mental health consequences of plant closing and
job loss. In L. A. Ferman, & J. P. Gordus (Eds.), Mental health and the
economy. Kalamazoo, Mich.: Kalamazoo Press.
Kessler, R. C., Turner, J. B., & House, J. S. (1987). Intervening processes in the
relationship between unemployment and health. Psychological Medicine, 17,
959-961.
Kieselbach, T., & Svensson, P. G. (1988). Health and social policy responses to
unemployment in Europe. Journal of Social Issues, 44, 173-191.
Kilpatrick, R., & Trew, K. (1985). Life-styles and psychological well-being among
unemployed men in Northern Ireland. Journal of Occupational Psychology,
58, 207-216.
Kinicki, A. J., McKee, F. M., & Wade, K. J. (1996). Annual review, 1991-1995:
Occupational health. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 49, 190-220.
McCallum, J., & Geiselhart, K. (1996) Australia’s new aged. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Metzer, J.C., Dollard, M., Rogers, L. & Cordingley, S. (1997). Quality of worklife in
volunteers. Australian Journal on Volunteering, 2, 8-15.
Muller, J.J., Delahaye, B., Winocur, S., & Hicks, R. (1996). The psychological impact
of long-term unemployment, sex differences, and activity: A case study
analysis. Journal of Applied Social Behaviour, 3, 30-43.
Mumford, K. (1989). Women working: Economics and reality. Sydney:Allen &
Unwin.
![Page 33: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
32
Onyx, J. & Benton, P. (1995). What does retirement mean for women? In J. Onyx
(Ed.), Empowering older women: Revisioning ageing. (pp. 69-81) Warrington,
NSW: University of Western Sydney.
Patterson Mean, L. J. (1997). Long-term unemployment amongst adolescents: A
longitudinal study. Journal of Adolescence, 20, 261-280.
Patton,W., & Noller, P. (1990). Adolescent self-concept: Effects of being employed,
unemployed or returning to school. Australian Journal of Psychology, 42, 247-
259.
Phillipson, C. (1982). Capitalism and the construction of old age. London: Macmillan.
Prause, J., & Dooley, D. (1997). Effect of underemployment on school-leavers’ self-
esteem. Journal of Adolescence, 20, 243-260.
Poole, M., & Langan-Fox, J. (1997). Australian women and careers: Psychological and
contextual influences over the life course. Melbourne: Cambridge University
Press.
Quick, J.C., Murphy, L.R., & Hurrell, J.J. (1992). Stress and well-being at work.
Washington: American Psychological Association.
Quick, J.C., Quick, J.D., Nelson, D.L. & Hurrell, J.J. (1997). Preventive stress
management in organizations (2nd. Ed.). Washington: APA Books.
Robbins, S. P., Waters-Marsh, T., Cacioppe, R., & Millett, B. (1994). Organisational
behaviour: Concepts, controversies and applications. New York: Prentice Hall.
Rodgers, B. (1991). Socio-economic status, employment and neurosis. Social
Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 26, 104-114.
Rowley, K. M., & Feather, N. T. (1987). The impact of unemployment in relation to
age and length of unemployment. Journal of Occupational Psychology, 60,
323-32.
Ryan, E., & Conlon, A. (1989). Gentle invaders: Australian women at work.
Ringwood, Vic: Penguin Books Australia Ltd.
Sampson, E. E. (1989). The challenge of social change for psychology. American
Psychologist, 44, 914-921.
![Page 34: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
33
Schaufeli, W. B. (1997). Youth unemployment and mental health: Some Dutch
findings. Journal of Adolescence, 20, 281-292.
Schaufeli, W. B., & Van Yperen, N. W. (1992). Unemployment and psychological
distress among graduates: A longitudinal study. Journal of Occupational and
Organizational Psychology, 65, 291-305.
Seligman, M. (1997). The optimistic child. Sydney: Random House.
Sokejima, S. & Kagamimori, S. (1998). Working hours as a risk factor for acute
myocardial infarction in Japan: case-control study. British Medical Journal,
317, 775-780.
Stebbins, R. A. (1982). Serious leisure: A conceptual statement. Pacific Sociological
Review, 25, 251-272.
Strazdins, L. (2000). Integrating emotions: Multiple role measurement of emotional
work. Australian Journal of Psychology, (In press).
Swan, G. E., Dame, A., & Carmelli, D. (1991). Involuntary retirement, Type A
behavior, and current functioning in elderly men: 27-year follow-up of the
Western Collaborative Group Study. Psychology and Aging, 6, 384-391.
Szinovacz, M., & Washo, C. (1992). Gender differences in exposure to life events and
adaptation to retirement. Journal of Gerontology, 47, 191-196.
Talaga, J., & Beehr, T. A. (1989). Retirement: a psychological perspective. In C. L.
Cooper and I. T. Robertson (Eds.), International Review of Industrial and
Organizational Psychology, (pp. 185-211). Chichester: Wiley.
Warr, P. B. (1987). Work, unemployment, and mental health. Oxford: Clarendon
Press.
Warr, P. B., & Jackson, P. R. (1987). Adapting to the unemployed role: A longitudinal
investigation. Social Science and Medicine, 24, 1-6.
Wilkinson, R.G. (1996). Unhealthy societies: the afflictions of inequality. London:
Routledge.
Winefield, A. H. (1995). Unemployment: Its psychological costs. In C. L. Cooper &
I. T. Robertson (Eds.), International Review of Industrial and Organizational
Psychology, Vol. 10, (pp. 169-212). London: Wiley.
![Page 35: The Psychology of Work and · PDF fileTo add further complexity to the experiences of work, unemployment and retirement, the nature of work is undergoing radical and rapid change,](https://reader030.vdocuments.mx/reader030/viewer/2022011723/5aa6c0f97f8b9ac8748eb136/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
34
Winefield, A. H. (1999). Measuring the impact of the Work for the Dole pilot
projects on work ethic and self-esteem. Report commissioned by DETYA
(45pp). Canberra.
Winefield, A.H. (2000). Stress in academe. In D. Kenny, J.G. Carlson, F.J. McGuigan
& J.L. Sheppard (Eds.). Stress and Health: Research and Clinical
Applications, Chapter 23, pp. 437-446, Sydney: Harwood.
Winefield, A. H., Tiggemann, M., & Winefield, H. R. (1992). Spare time use and
psychological well-being in unemployed young people. Journal of
Occupational and Organisational Psychology, 65, 307-313.
Winefield, A. H., Tiggemann, M., Winefield, H. R., & Goldney, R. D. (1993).
Growing up with unemployment: A longitudinal study of its psychological
impact. London: Routledge.
Winefield, H.R. (2000). Stress reduction for family caregivers in chronic mental illness:
Implications of a work stress management perspective. International Journal of
Stress Management, (In press).