eBiltegia

    • What is eBiltegia? 
    •   About eBiltegia
    •   Publish your research in open access
    • Open Access at MU 
    •   What is Open Science?
    •   Mondragon Unibertsitatea's Institutional Policy on Open Access to scientific documents and teaching materials
    •   Mondragon Unibertsitatea's Institutional Open Access Policy for Research Data
    •   eBiltegia Digital Preservation Guidelines
    •   The Library compiles and disseminates your publications
    • Euskara
    • Español
    • English

xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.fecyt

  • Contact Us
  • English 
    • Euskara
    • Español
    • English
  • About eBiltegia  
    • What is eBiltegia? 
    •   About eBiltegia
    •   Publish your research in open access
    • Open Access at MU 
    •   What is Open Science?
    •   Mondragon Unibertsitatea's Institutional Policy on Open Access to scientific documents and teaching materials
    •   Mondragon Unibertsitatea's Institutional Open Access Policy for Research Data
    •   eBiltegia Digital Preservation Guidelines
    •   The Library compiles and disseminates your publications
  • Login
View Item 
  •   eBiltegia MONDRAGON UNIBERTSITATEA
  • Ikerketa-Artikuluak
  • Artikuluak-Ingeniaritza
  • View Item
  •   eBiltegia MONDRAGON UNIBERTSITATEA
  • Ikerketa-Artikuluak
  • Artikuluak-Ingeniaritza
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
View/Open
HRM systems and employee affective commitment The role of employee gender.pdf (434.2Kb)
Preprint.pdf (635.1Kb)
Full record
Impact

Web of Science   

Google Scholar
Share
EmailLinkedinFacebookTwitter
Save the reference
Mendely

Zotero

untranslated

Mets

Mods

Rdf

Marc

Exportar a BibTeX
Title
HRM systems and employee affective commitment: the role of employee gender
Author
Garmendia, Alaine
Madinabeitia-Olabarria, Damian
Author (from another institution)
Shin, DuckJung
Ali, Muhhamad
Konrad, Alison M.
Research Group
Innovación, gestión, organización
Other institutions
Chung-Ang University
University of Queensland
Western University
Version
Published version
Rights
© Emerald Publishing Limited
Access
Embargoed access
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11984/6363
Publisher’s version
https://doi.org/10.1108/GM-04-2019-0053
Published at
Gender in Management  Vol. 35. N. 2. Pp. 189-210, 2020
Publisher
Emerald
Abstract
Purpose Despite decades of studies on high-involvement human resource management (HRM) systems, questions remain of whether high-involvement HRM systems can increase the commitment of women. This stu ... [+]
Purpose Despite decades of studies on high-involvement human resource management (HRM) systems, questions remain of whether high-involvement HRM systems can increase the commitment of women. This study aims to contribute to the growing body of research on the cross-level effect of HRM systems and practices on employee affective commitment by considering the moderating role of gender. Design/methodology/approach Integrating social exchange theory with gender role theory, this paper proposes that gender responses to HRM practices can be different. The hypotheses were tested using data from 104 small- and medium-sized retail enterprises and 6,320 employees from Spain. Findings The findings generally support the study’s hypotheses, with women’s affective commitment responding more strongly and positively to employees’ aggregated perceptions of a shop-level high-involvement HRM system. The findings imply that a high-involvement HRM system can promote the affective commitment of women. Originality/value This study investigates the impact of both an overall HRM system and function-specific HRM sub-systems (e.g. training, information, participation and autonomy). By showing that women can be more positively affected by high-involvement HRM systems, this paper suggests that high-involvement HRM systems can be used to encourage the involvement and participation of women. [-]
Collections
  • Articles - Engineering [742]

Browse

All of eBiltegiaCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsResearch groupsPublished atThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsResearch groupsPublished at

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Harvested by:

OpenAIREBASERecolecta

Validated by:

OpenAIRERebiun
MONDRAGON UNIBERTSITATEA | Library
Contact Us | Send Feedback
DSpace
 

 

Harvested by:

OpenAIREBASERecolecta

Validated by:

OpenAIRERebiun
MONDRAGON UNIBERTSITATEA | Library
Contact Us | Send Feedback
DSpace