Tempering Employee Uncertainty: A Multilevel Analysis Examining Determinants of Job Insecurity Attitudes Among University Staff

Authors

  • Lisa W. Sublett University of Houston-Clear Lake
  • Lisa M. Penney University of South Florida

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v20i4.3210

Keywords:

Organizational Psychology, job insecurity, multilevel modeling, justice perceptions, employee satisfaction

Abstract

Job insecurity is a crucial employee attitude to study, especially in challenging economic times. The current study uses a multilevel modeling approach to evaluate the predictors of job insecurity, both at the employee-level (Nemployees=1144) and organizational division-level (Ndivisions=25) among university staff and faculty at a university in the southern United States. The results indicate that employee-level justice perceptions, constraints, and pay and communication satisfaction influence job insecurity as well as division-level perceived supervisor support. Overall, this study helps identify mechanisms that are largely in the organization’s control which could lessen feelings of job insecurity among its employees.

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Published

2020-11-12

How to Cite

Sublett, L. W., & Penney, L. M. (2020). Tempering Employee Uncertainty: A Multilevel Analysis Examining Determinants of Job Insecurity Attitudes Among University Staff. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 20(4). https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v20i4.3210

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Section

Articles