Beyond “Psychic Income”: An Exploration of Interventions to Address Work-Life Imbalances, Burnout, and Precarity in Contemporary Nonprofit Work

IF 2.2 Q2 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
R. Robichau, B. Sandberg, A. Russo
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract Nonprofit scholars and practitioners alike adhere to a long-held assumption that nonprofit work is, and will remain, inherently meaningful work. The long-term marketization of the nonprofit sector coupled with the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic has undercut this narrative. Our research on meaningful nonprofit work indicates that while many nonprofit workers do find their work meaningful, pay, flexibility, and work/life balance are increasingly important to them. This commentary suggests that nonprofit leaders can no longer presume that workers motivated by prosocial values will seek out and stay with nonprofit work, satisfied with the “psychic income” that comes from doing good work. Nonprofits must be managed and led differently such that they center workers’ contemporary needs and desires. Organizational and public policy initiatives around pay equity and flexible work can support such a transition for the nonprofit sector.
超越“精神收入”:当代非营利工作中解决工作与生活不平衡、倦怠和不稳定的干预探索
非营利学者和从业者都坚持一个长期持有的假设,即非营利工作本质上是,并且将继续是有意义的工作。非营利部门的长期市场化,加上COVID-19大流行的影响,削弱了这种说法。我们对有意义的非营利工作的研究表明,尽管许多非营利工作人员确实觉得他们的工作有意义,但薪酬、灵活性和工作/生活平衡对他们来说越来越重要。这篇评论表明,非营利组织的领导人不能再假设,受亲社会价值观激励的员工会寻求并留在非营利组织工作,满足于做好工作所带来的“精神收入”。非营利组织必须以不同的方式管理和领导,以员工的当代需求和愿望为中心。围绕薪酬公平和灵活工作的组织和公共政策倡议可以支持非营利部门的这种转变。
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来源期刊
Nonprofit Policy Forum
Nonprofit Policy Forum PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
18.80%
发文量
23
审稿时长
7 weeks
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