How psychological safety influences intention to leave? The mediation roles of networking ability and relational job crafting

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Aviation Management
(2011)
The Department of Aviation Management opened in 2011 under the Atılım University Graduate School of Civil Aviation. The department curriculum encompasses management and aviation, and education is offered in English as the language of global aviation. Aviation is a sector with a potential for growth globally by around five percent each year, and nationally by ten percent or more, exceeding the worldwide averages. The Department of Aviation Management trains individuals equipped to work in aviation at public institutions, airlines, ground operation institutions, terminal services and general aviation organizations. Our department offers an opportunity for students to study abroad for a semester under our Erasmus+ contracts, and a chance to familiarize themselves with the sector via summer internship programs organized twice throughout their period of study. In addition, some of the aviation courses are presented at relevant institutions (e.g. Terminal operations).

Journal Issue

Abstract

Drawing 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.

Description

KIZRAK, Meral/0000-0003-0053-6043; KEMIKKIRAN, NURCAN/0000-0001-6629-8901; Aydin, Esra/0000-0003-3302-7691

Keywords

Intention to leave, Networking ability, Psychological safety, Relational job crafting, Social capital theory, Conservation of resources

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

2

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q2

Source

Volume

43

Issue

10

Start Page

9485

End Page

9503

Collections