Litcius/Paper detail

Resilience in Public Sector Managers

Geoff Plimmer, Evan M. Berman, Sanna Malinen, Esmé Franken, Katharina Näswall, Joana Kuntz, Karl Löfgren

2021Review of Public Personnel Administration66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study discusses the concept of employee resilience (ER), defined as the capability to use resources to continually adapt and flourish at work, even when faced with challenging circumstances. The concept is grounded in positive psychology and conservation of resources (COR) theory and complements other concepts such as coping which describe employees and managers adapting to challenge and change. This study validates a scale of ER and examines attributes and job factors associated with heightened ER in public sector line managers. Study results show that heightened ER is associated with public service motivation (PSM), employees’ pro-social skills and constructive leadership by supervisors. ER is also associated with a climate for innovation. Theoretical and practical implications for strengthening employees’ resilience in public organizations are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Public service motivationPublic sectorConstructivePublic relationsPsychological resilienceCoping (psychology)Resilience (materials science)Public serviceBusinessConservation of resources theoryGrounded theoryHuman resource managementSociologyPsychologySocial psychologyPolitical scienceManagementQualitative researchEconomicsProcess (computing)Computer scienceSocial scienceLawPhysicsOperating systemThermodynamicsPsychiatryOccupational Health and Safety ResearchSupply Chain Resilience and Risk ManagementResilience and Mental Health