Publication | Closed Access
Theoretical and Methodological Problems Within Occupational Stress and Burnout Research
147
Citations
51
References
1988
Year
Research TechniquesBurnout ResearchHuman Resource ManagementWorker Well-beingWork AdjustmentSocial SciencesOrganizational BehaviorPsychologyBurnoutManagementWork AttitudeJob SatisfactionOccupational StressApplied Social PsychologyWork-related StressBusinessOccupational TherapyImplicit AssumptionsWorklife Balance
This article examines the implicit assumptions underlying current research into occupational stress and burnout. It argues that the two fields utilize similar theoretical models and research techniques and therefore have a number of problems in common. These problems arise from their common tendency to adopt a psychological perspective which pays insufficient attention to the complexity of the interrelationship between social conditions and subjective experience. The article suggests that both fields could be strengthened by incorporating more sociological concepts and developing analyses of the effects which discrepancies between the manifest and latent functions and surface and deep structures of organizations have on the individual's subjective experiences of work. The value of such analyses is illustrated with three examples of empirical research utilizing this perspective.
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