Abstract

Integrating theories of adult attachment and well-being at the workplace, the present study tested the role of attachment style in predicting work-related well-being in terms of job satisfaction and job involvement, over and above dispositional trait measures (emotional traits and work-related traits). A sample of workers took part in a correlational study that explored the relationships among a) adult attachment, b) emotional traits, c) work-related traits, and d) work-related well-being indices. The results showed that both secure and anxious attachment style explained workers' job involvement, whereas the secure and avoidant attachment styles explained workers' job satisfaction. The current findings thus confirm and expand the literature's emphasis on studying the variables and processes that underlie people's mental health in the work setting, and have implications for assessing and promoting well-being in the workplace.

Details

Title
Individual Differences in Work-Related Well-Being: The Role of Attachment Style
Author
Lanciano, Tiziana; Zammuner, Vanda Lucia
Pages
694-711
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Nov 2014
Publisher
Europe's Journal of Psychology
e-ISSN
18410413
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1630023632
Copyright
Copyright Europe's Journal of Psychology Nov 2014