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Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Published

Standard

Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition. / Nicholson, Nigel ; West, Michael.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. 288 p.

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Harvard

Nicholson, N & West, M 1988, Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

APA

Nicholson, N., & West, M. (1988). Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition. Cambridge University Press.

Vancouver

Nicholson N, West M. Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. 288 p.

Author

Nicholson, Nigel ; West, Michael. / Managerial Job Change : Men and Women in Transition. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1988. 288 p.

Bibtex

@book{79386ae7da9843f586311f6a4cc8e550,
title = "Managerial Job Change: Men and Women in Transition",
abstract = "Work role transitions are among the most significant yet least understood forms of social change, and how they affect individuals' careers, self-concepts and organizational adjustment is of great practical and theoretical importance. This book provides the first comprehensive, large-scale study of the causes, form and outcomes of job change. Focussing on one of the most influential segments of society - middle to senior managers - the book offers a new theoretical approach to the analysis and understanding of job change. The authors ask how much job change is taking place, assess who is most affected, and evaluate the psychological consequences for the individual manager. They discuss organizations' handling of job transitions, and provide a unique focus on women in management, evaluating how their experience of careers and job change differs from men's. This book presents important new findings to specialists in life-span development, careers, managerial performance and organizational behaviour. It also offers the non-specialist insights into wider questions, such as the relationship between social change and organizational life, and the individual's experience of changes in industrial society's structures, practices and values.",
author = "Nigel Nicholson and Michael West",
year = "1988",
language = "English",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Managerial Job Change

T2 - Men and Women in Transition

AU - Nicholson, Nigel

AU - West, Michael

PY - 1988

Y1 - 1988

N2 - Work role transitions are among the most significant yet least understood forms of social change, and how they affect individuals' careers, self-concepts and organizational adjustment is of great practical and theoretical importance. This book provides the first comprehensive, large-scale study of the causes, form and outcomes of job change. Focussing on one of the most influential segments of society - middle to senior managers - the book offers a new theoretical approach to the analysis and understanding of job change. The authors ask how much job change is taking place, assess who is most affected, and evaluate the psychological consequences for the individual manager. They discuss organizations' handling of job transitions, and provide a unique focus on women in management, evaluating how their experience of careers and job change differs from men's. This book presents important new findings to specialists in life-span development, careers, managerial performance and organizational behaviour. It also offers the non-specialist insights into wider questions, such as the relationship between social change and organizational life, and the individual's experience of changes in industrial society's structures, practices and values.

AB - Work role transitions are among the most significant yet least understood forms of social change, and how they affect individuals' careers, self-concepts and organizational adjustment is of great practical and theoretical importance. This book provides the first comprehensive, large-scale study of the causes, form and outcomes of job change. Focussing on one of the most influential segments of society - middle to senior managers - the book offers a new theoretical approach to the analysis and understanding of job change. The authors ask how much job change is taking place, assess who is most affected, and evaluate the psychological consequences for the individual manager. They discuss organizations' handling of job transitions, and provide a unique focus on women in management, evaluating how their experience of careers and job change differs from men's. This book presents important new findings to specialists in life-span development, careers, managerial performance and organizational behaviour. It also offers the non-specialist insights into wider questions, such as the relationship between social change and organizational life, and the individual's experience of changes in industrial society's structures, practices and values.

M3 - Book

BT - Managerial Job Change

PB - Cambridge University Press

CY - Cambridge

ER -