After years of neglect, organizational research has increasingly focused on emotions at work. This book is the first to bring together recent findings in one place and present a solid industrial/organizational research perspective on this complex area of inquiry.
Emotions in the Workplace offers a concise, scholarly introduction to new developments and an overview of how basic theory and research in affect and emotions has influenced the science and practice of industrial/organizational psychology. A varied and distinguished group of contributors examines emotional regulation in organizations on a number of different levels, integrating research on individual, dyadic, group, and organizational-level phenomena. In one convenient volume, the book addresses a wide range of key topics, including aggression at work, emotional labor, the work-family interface, and more.
Contributors include:
- Richard D. Arvey
- Blake E. Ashforth
- Analea L. Brauburger
- Ed Diener
- P. Christopher Earley
- Clare A. Francis
- Jennifer M. George
- Theresa M. Glomb
- Alicia A. Grandey
- Jennifer L. Harvey
- Ruth Kanfer
- Tracy Kantrowitz
- Richard J. Klimoski
- Randy J. Larsen
- Richard Lucas
- Robert G. Lord
- Shelley MacDermid
- S. Douglas Pugh
- Anat Rafaeli
- Alan M. Saks
- Brenda L. Seery
- Piers Steel
- Howard M. I. Weiss
- Monica C. Worline
- Amy Wrzesniewski