Book contents
- Organizational Stress and Well-Being
- Cambridge Companions To Management
- Organizational Stress and Well-Being
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Historical Evolution and Continued Relevance of the Study of Organizational Stress and Well-Being
- Part II Line Managers
- Part III Major Issues Relating to Stress and Well-Being
- 6 Work–Nonwork Balance and Employee Well-Being
- 7 Understanding the Decision-Making Process for Presenteeism Behavior
- 8 Burnout
- 9 Work Engagement and Organizational Well-Being
- 10 How and Why Gender Relates to Workplace Stress and Well-Being
- 11 The Measurement of Well-Being at Work
- Part IV Workplace Interventions Addressing Stress and Well-Being
- Part V Emerging Issues
- Subject Index
- References
9 - Work Engagement and Organizational Well-Being
from Part III - Major Issues Relating to Stress and Well-Being
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 February 2023
- Organizational Stress and Well-Being
- Cambridge Companions To Management
- Organizational Stress and Well-Being
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Historical Evolution and Continued Relevance of the Study of Organizational Stress and Well-Being
- Part II Line Managers
- Part III Major Issues Relating to Stress and Well-Being
- 6 Work–Nonwork Balance and Employee Well-Being
- 7 Understanding the Decision-Making Process for Presenteeism Behavior
- 8 Burnout
- 9 Work Engagement and Organizational Well-Being
- 10 How and Why Gender Relates to Workplace Stress and Well-Being
- 11 The Measurement of Well-Being at Work
- Part IV Workplace Interventions Addressing Stress and Well-Being
- Part V Emerging Issues
- Subject Index
- References
Summary
Work engagement (WE) research has increased in recent years. In the past 10 years, about 1,000 peer-reviewed papers, 400 PhD theses, and over 100 books have been published on work/employee engagement. Thanks to this research, we know more about what work engagement is, how and when employees experience it, and how work engagement is related to improved organizational well-being, among others. This chapter presents a brief overview of the recent literature with the aim of identifying both lessons learned and gaps in our understanding of the relationship between work engagement and organizational well-being. The chapter specifically aims to offer a comprehensive framework of what work engagement is, how and why WE is experienced by employees, and the way it is conceptually connected to different facets of well-being in organizations, such as physical, psychological/mental, and social well-being. The chapter ends with some theoretical and practical insights, as well as an agenda for further research on the link between WE and well-being and their reciprocal relationship over time in modern and positive organizations.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Organizational Stress and Well-Being , pp. 260 - 308Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023