Publication | Closed Access
Determinants of job mobility: A theoretical integration and extension
248
Citations
126
References
2006
Year
Job mobility is shaped by macro‑level structural factors, individual dispositional attributes, and theoretical perspectives that influence opportunity and behavior. The paper aims to conceptually integrate and extend the diverse literature on job mobility. The authors present a multi‑level theoretical framework linking macro conditions, individual dispositions, and planned‑behaviour decisions to explain job mobility. The article concludes by highlighting the multi‑level determinants of job mobility and proposing directions for future research.
The goals of this paper are to conceptually integrate and extend the diverse literature on job mobility. We introduce a multi‐level theoretical framework that describes how individuals' job mobility unfolds. Three theoretical perspectives inform this framework. The structural perspective suggests that macro‐level factors (e.g. economic conditions and industry differences) determine the opportunity structure of job mobility in the labour market. The individual difference perspective suggests that dispositional attributes affect a person's preferences for and subsequent behaviours associated with job mobility. The decisional perspective, grounded in the theory of planned behaviour ( Ajzen, 1991 ), suggests that decisions to engage in job mobility are based on the evaluation of three factors: subjective norms, the desirability of the mobility option and individuals' readiness for change. The article concludes with a discussion of the multi‐level nature of determinants of job mobility and directions for future research.
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