Perceived Calling Enablement: Achieving Positive Work Outcomes Through Unanswered Calling
Ju Young Lee (),
Viva Nsair () and
Boram Do ()
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Ju Young Lee: Western University
Viva Nsair: Western Michigan University
Boram Do: Yonsei University
Journal of Happiness Studies, 2024, vol. 25, issue 5, No 10, 31 pages
Abstract:
Abstract Despite the various positive outcomes of perceived calling fulfillment at work that previous scholars have suggested, little effort has been made to understand employees who have a calling but do not identify it with their current work. By integrating self-determination theory into the calling literature, we explore how having a calling outside of one’s workplace can still lead individuals to connect strongly with their work through a mechanism that we term perceived calling enablement. Through an initial qualitative study, we identify four ways through which employees perceive their work as a calling enabler: as a source of (1) financial resources, (2) time flexibility, (3) skill development and learning, and (4) social networks/connections that allow people to pursue their callings. Then, in a series of quantitative survey studies, we developed a measure of perceived calling enablement that reflects these four dimensions and showed that perceived calling enablement facilitated work attitudes and behaviors such as job satisfaction, willingness to sacrifice, and job crafting.
Keywords: Calling; Perceived calling enablement; Self-determination theory; Positive psychology applied to work (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1007/s10902-024-00762-7
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