Relational Job Characteristics and Work Engagement: Mediation by Prosocial Motivation |
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Authors: | Filipa Castanheira Maria José Chambel Sílvia Lopes Fernando Oliveira-Cruz |
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Affiliation: | 1. Nova School of Business and Economics, Universidade Nova de Lisboafcastanheira@novasbe.pt;3. Faculty of Psychology, Universidade de Lisboa;4. Army Centre of Applied Psychology, Lisbon, Portugal |
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Abstract: | This study tested the relation between perceived social impact, social worth, and work engagement in the military, and mediating effects of prosocial motivation. We tested hypotheses using structural equation modeling analysis in a field study with 322 officers and sergeants and 1,045 soldiers of the Portuguese Army. Results confirmed that perceived social impact and social worth were associated with work engagement. Furthermore, regardless of the rank category, perceived social impact was associated with higher prosocial motivation, which in turn was associated with higher work engagement. In the soldiers subsample, results further indicated that soldiers’ perceived social worth was associated with higher prosocial motivation, which in turn was related to higher work engagement. The direct effects of perceived social impact and social worth on work engagement, and the mediating role of prosocial motivation supported the hypothesis that perceptions of social impact and social worth may strengthen the motives to “do good” (prosocial motivation), leading to an upward spiral that cultivates work engagement among members of the military. |
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Keywords: | relational job design work engagement prosocial motivation |
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