Impact of self-orientations and work-context-related variables on the well-being of public- and private-sector Turkish employees |
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Authors: | Imamoğlu E Olcay Beydoğan Başak |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. eolcay@metu.edu.tr |
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Abstract: | The authors (a) explored the impact of individual differences in self-orientations (i.e., relatedness and individuation) of 383 Turkish public- and private-sector employees on their basic need satisfaction at work and their well-being (i.e., life satisfaction and psychological well-being); (b) considered differences in perceived autonomy- and relatedness-supportiveness of the work contexts; and (c) tested a model in which the relationship between self-orientations and well-being is partially mediated by the perceived supportiveness of the work context and the need satisfaction of employees at work, using structural equation modeling. Results suggest that self-orientations of employees predict their well-being both directly and indirectly through the mediation of perceived supportiveness and need satisfaction provided by the work context, which seem to vary according to sector type. |
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