İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi / Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/1399
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Item The Impact Of High-Performance Human Resource Practices On Subjective Career Success: The Mediating Role Of Psychological Capital And Organizational Commitment(JOURNAL OF EAST EUROPEAN MANAGEMENT STUDIES, 2024-06-19) Toyata, Berk; Kizrak, Meral; Cakar, MehmetUtilizing insights from positive psychology, social exchange theory, and social cognitive career theory, this study aims to investigate the mediating role of psychological capital and organizational commitment in the relationship between high-performance human resource (HR) practices and subjective career success. Data were collected from a sample of 429 private sector employees working on European Union projects in Turkey. Hypotheses were tested using regression, correlation, and mediation analyses, as well as Sobel test statistics. Results indicate that high-performance HR practices, organizational commitment, and psychological capital positively influence subjective career success. Additionally, there is evidence that, unlike organizational commitment, psychological capital mediates the relationship between high-performance HR practices and subjective career success. Our study underscores the need for organizations to foster and develop psychological capital among their employees to maximize the effectiveness of HR practices in promoting subjective career success.Item How Psychological Safety Influences Intention to Lave? The Mediation Roles of Networking Ability and Relational Job Crafting(CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2024) Kizrak, Meral; cinar, Esra; Aydin, Esra; Kemikkiran, NurcanDrawing on the Conservation of Resources (COR) theory and the social capital approach, this study aims at examining a serial mediation model to explore why employees intend to leave their organization by taking into consideration psychological safety, networking ability and relational job crafting. We tested our research hypotheses with the data obtained from 218 employees working in different sectors. The results revealed that (1) psychological safety is negatively associated with intention to leave, and (2) networking ability and relational job crafting serially mediate the link between psychological safety and intention to leave. This study presents crucial evidence for organizations to retain and engage employees by justifying the importance and effects of building social relationships in the workplace.