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Appraising Emotion Work Determining Whether Emotional Labor Is Valued in Government Jobs

Por: Mastracci, Sharon.
Colaborador(es): Newman, Meredith A | Guy, Mary E.
California SAGE 2006Descripción: 17 páginas.Tema(s): COMUNICACIÓN NO VERBAL EN EL LUGAR DE TRABAJO | EMPLEADOS | ACTITUDES | RELACIONES CON LOS CLIENTES | MICROFINANZAS | MIGRACIÓN Y MIGRANTES | SELECCIÓN DE PERSONAL | DESIGUALDAD DE GÉNEROS | IGUALDAD DE REMUNERACIÓN | ESTADOS UNIDOS | AMÉRICA DEL NORTERecursos en línea: Haga clic para acceso en línea
Contenidos:
Literature review -- Jobs and emotional labor -- Method -- Findings from analyzing
En: The American Review of Public Administration 2006. Volumen 36 Número 2, p. 123-138Resumen: In an era when greater responsiveness is required of government workers, the authors test whether there is a blind spot in employee performance appraisals that prevents rewarding the most effective workers. Emotional labor—work that is relational and involves the manipulation and expression of emotions—is labor intensive and is required of many public service workers if they are to perform their jobs well. The authors hypothesize that rationality, or “left brain” work, remains privileged whereas relational work remains marginalized and unrewarded. To investigate whether there is a disconnect between the required performance of emotional labor and annual appraisals that acknowledge its performance, the authors review appraisal instruments used by public agencies in Illinois. Results confirm that 86 por ciento of the instruments identify the performance of emotion work at only a perfunctory level or lower. The lack of acknowledgement renders such labor invisible and contributes to depressed wages of those whose jobs require it.
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Literature review -- Jobs and emotional labor -- Method -- Findings from analyzing

In an era when greater responsiveness is required of government workers, the authors test whether there is a blind spot in employee performance appraisals that prevents rewarding the most effective workers. Emotional labor—work that is relational and involves the manipulation and expression of emotions—is labor intensive and is required of many public service workers if they are to perform their jobs well. The authors hypothesize that rationality, or “left brain” work, remains privileged whereas relational work remains marginalized and unrewarded. To investigate whether there is a disconnect between the required performance of emotional labor and annual appraisals that acknowledge its performance, the authors review appraisal instruments used by public agencies in Illinois. Results confirm that 86 por ciento of the instruments identify the performance of emotion work at only a perfunctory level or lower. The lack of acknowledgement renders such labor invisible and contributes to depressed wages of those whose jobs require it.

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