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Creating and Sustaining Service Industry Relationships and Families: Theorizing How Personal Workplace Relationships Both Build Community and Perpetuate Organizational Violence

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

2 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Service industry workers experience challenging labor conditions in the United States, including pay below the minimum wage, expected emotional labor, and harassment. Additionally, in part because they work long shifts in high stress environments in restaurants and bars, many build and form personal workplace relationships (PWRs). In 2021, we interviewed 38 service industry workers and managers during the COVID-19 pandemic where we examined occupational challenges they faced in the state of Texas, USA. Through our interpretive research, this essay showcases our inductive findings on how service industry workers and managers utilize communication to create and sustain PWRs. We identified how some PWRs are sustained through a unique form of occupational identification that cultivates a “service industry family”, which we term familial personal workplace relationships (familial PWRs). This extends past organizational communication scholarship on family to consider occupational identification. Furthermore, our research reveals that while PWRs may build communities through care and support, they also perpetuate organizational violence, like sexual harassment and bullying.

Idioma originalEnglish
Número de artículo184
PublicaciónBehavioral Sciences
Volumen12
N.º6
DOI
EstadoPublished - jun 2022

Nota bibliográfica

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Financiación

Following our questionnaire sampling, Elizabeth, Emily, and Riki conducted interviews in 2021 with participants typically lasting 60–70 min, with others ranging from 90–127 min. In order to follow pandemic IRB guidelines, no interviews were held in-person, only via phone or Zoom. After informed consent, these interviews were audio recorded on the authors’ password-protected computers and saved to a university shared drive. Those recordings were then transcribed by the authors or professional transcriptionists and then deleted. Interviewees received a $10 gift card for their participation, which was funded by Elizabeth’s new faculty research funds from Texas State University. Funding: This research was supported in part through Author Elizabeth K. Eger’s Texas State University’s College of Fine Arts and Communication and the Department of Communication Studies new faculty research funds. We wish to thank TXST for this support to compensate our participants and to support Author Emily Pollard’s additional interviewing and data analysis time.

Financiadores
Department of Communication Studies new faculty research funds
Elizabeth’s new faculty research funds from Texas State University
Texas State University’s College of Fine Arts

    ODS de las Naciones Unidas

    Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

    1. Decent work and economic growth
      Decent work and economic growth
    2. Peace justice and strong institutions
      Peace justice and strong institutions

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
    • Development
    • Genetics
    • General Psychology
    • Behavioral Neuroscience

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