Feeling Good and Being Inspired on Campus : Meaningful Work in Academia
Riivari, E., Malin, V., Jääskelä, P., & Lukkari, T. (2020). Feeling Good and Being Inspired on Campus : Meaningful Work in Academia. In M. Fotaki, G. Islam, & A. Antoni (Eds.), Business Ethics and Care in Organizations (pp. 157-171). Routledge. Routledge Studies in Business Ethics, 20. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429029943-10
Published in
Routledge Studies in Business EthicsDate
2020Discipline
Organisational Ethics, Leadership and HRMKieletResponsible Management, Learning, Digitalization & StrategyJohtaminenKestävä liiketoiminta ja talous (painoala)KasvatustiedeBasic or discovery scholarshipApplied or integration/application scholarshipTeaching and learning scholarshipOrganisational Ethics, Leadership and HRMLanguagesResponsible Management, Learning, Digitalization & StrategyManagement and LeadershipSustainable Business and Economy (focus area)EducationBasic or discovery scholarshipApplied or integration/application scholarshipTeaching and learning scholarshipCopyright
© 2019 Taylor & Francis group
Theories related to good and caring organisations have gained interest amongst researchers. In particular, the concept of meaningful work has been under discussion recently in academia. This study contributes to knowledge of the concept of meaningful work by examining it from the perspective of good and caring organisations in the higher education context. Our focus this chapter is on the positive opportunities individual lecturers have to make their own work meaningful and to promote their students’ experiences of meaningfulness. The empirical findings are based on the analysis of qualitative data collected from a management course with special attention to relational features, such as dialogue, collaboration and communication, that have been found to be crucial to meaningful work and good organisations.
Publisher
RoutledgeParent publication ISBN
978-0-367-14060-1Is part of publication
Business Ethics and Care in OrganizationsPublication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/34036021
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Kauppakorkeakoulu [1367]
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
What matters and how to find it? : career stories of finding meaningful work and how it is experienced by different individuals
Sirkiä, Anne (2019)Tämän tutkimuksen tavoitteena on tulkita ja kuvata miten ihmiset ovat päätyneet merkitykselliseen työhön ja millaiseksi merkityksellinen työ koetaan. Merkityksellistä työtä on tutkittu työ- ja organisaatiopsykologian parissa ... -
Algorithmic management of crowdworkers : Implications for workers’ identity, belonging, and meaningfulness of work
van Zoonen, Ward; Sivunen, Anu E.; Treem, Jeffrey W. (Elsevier, 2024)Online labor platforms function as meta-organizations, blending elements of an open market and hierarchical structure by algorithmically governing goals and objectives. This study investigates how this algorithmic management ... -
Robotizing meaningful work
Turja, Tuuli; Minkkinen, Jaana; Mauno, Saija (Emerald, 2022)Purpose Robots have a history of replacing human labor in undesirable, dirty, dull and dangerous tasks. With robots now emerging in academic and human-centered work, this paper aims to investigate psychological implications ... -
Meaningfulness in the Work of Language Professionals
Virtaluoto, Jenni; Selkälä, Satu (Roskilde universitetsforlag, 2022)This qualitative study explores the changes that a specific group of knowledge workers – language professionals in Finland – have undergone in their work and how they perceive the meaningfulness of their work as a result. ... -
Finding meaning in crowdwork : An analysis of algorithmic management, work characteristics, and meaningfulness
van Zoonen, Ward; ter Hoeven, Claartje; Morgan, Ryan (Taylor & Francis, 2023)In this study we investigate the implications of different aspects of algorithmic coordination and algorithmic quantification for perceived work conditions and the meaningfulness of crowdwork. Using survey data obtained ...