World Scientific
Skip main navigation

Cookies Notification

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience. By continuing to browse the site, you consent to the use of our cookies. Learn More
×
Spring Sale: Get 35% off with a min. purchase of 2 titles. Use code SPRING35. Valid till 31st Mar 2025.

System Upgrade on Tue, May 28th, 2024 at 2am (EDT)

Existing users will be able to log into the site and access content. However, E-commerce and registration of new users may not be available for up to 12 hours.
For online purchase, please visit us again. Contact us at customercare@wspc.com for any enquiries.
Organizational Commitment cover
Also available at Amazon and Kobo

Organizational commitment (OC) is typically thought of in mainstream research as a beneficial behaviour, with employers mutually rewarding employees for their labor. However, in recent decades, there have been many signs that the benefits of OC cannot be taken for granted. The world of work is changing, with organizations downsizing, outsourcing labor activities and restructuring into leaner entities.

Adding to this is the trend whereby almost everywhere, organizations are systematically striving to avoid long-term commitment to their workforce, by resorting to atypical, non-standard jobs (such as part-time work, temporary or agency employment, and other types of insecure jobs). This new regime of employment is an escape from organizational commitment and a tendency to avoid long-term relations.

In this book, the author challenges the mainstream research on OC. Surveying the rise and fall of the idea of OC among corporate managers and employees, in an era of escape from responsibility and commitment, the author redefines OC as unique, unrewarded behavior of a minority of employees in times of trouble for their employing organization. These employees, who have alternatives in the labor market, continue to stay unrewarded with their organizations despite their ability to leave for a more secure and rewarding workplace.

Presenting this new definition of OC, the author addresses theoretical and empirical flaws in the current concept, while returning to an idea of commitment that is more widely used in social sciences: Commitment as a guarantee of fulfilment of obligations, which are neither motivating nor pleasant, but necessary.

Sample Chapter(s)
Introduction
Chapter 3: Measuring Organizational Commitment


Contents:
  • A Chronicle of the Concept of Organizational Commitment
  • Loyalty: The Forgotten Brick in the Organizational Commitment Construct
  • Measuring Organizational Commitment
  • Some Research Evidence on Organizational Commitment in its Golden Age
  • Organizational Commitment as a Case of Scientific Disarray
  • The Escape from Organizational Commitment by Employing Organizations
  • Organizational Commitment: A Redefinition
  • Empirical Study I of BOC: Voice as a Form of Behavioral Commitment
  • Empirical Study II of BOC: EVLFN in Relation to Perceived Employment Alternatives and Perceived Organizational Power
  • Empirical Study III of BOC: Further Tests of the New Concept of Organizational Commitment
  • Epistemological View of Organizational Commitment

Readership: Undergraduate and graduate students of organizational behavior and organizational commitment, and employers or interested general readers.