
Work is a central aspect of life, providing a source of structure, a means of survival, connection to others, and optimally a means of self-determination. Across the globe, people devote considerable time and effort to preparing for, adjusting to, and managing their work lives. Many of the major crises affecting people and communities--including wars, famines, poverty, and risks to personal safety--have been and continue to be related to working. At the same time, working, when it is dignified and meaningful, can create the foundation for a satisfying life that allows people to support themselves and their families, and to find an outlet for their values and interests in the world of work.This handbook is designed to expand and deepen a growing discourse about the psychological nature of working. Building on critiques of psychology's traditional assumptions and practices about work and career, the psychology of working perspective has been advanced as an inclusive, broad-reaching framework that explores the nature of working for the full spectrum of people who work and who want to work. This volume is characterized by disciplinary pluralism with contributions from a wide range of scholars and practitioners interested in the role of work in people's lives. Chapters explore theoretical foundations, the context of working, counseling and psychotherapy, organizational implications, community-based interventions, and public policy. As a major resource in the psychology of working field, this book is a must-have for counseling and clinical psychologists, I/O psychologists, mental-health counselors, social workers, management consultants, and a wide array of researchers and students who are concerned with the nature of work in the 21st century, transformative scholarship, public policy, and inclusive psychological practice.
This volume investigates the psychological nature of working by challenging traditional career development assumptions and proposing an inclusive, broad-reaching framework for understanding work across the global population. Editor David L. Blustein, a prominent scholar in vocational psychology, compiles contributions from a diverse array of researchers and practitioners to examine how work functions as a central pillar of human existence. The text argues that by integrating theoretical foundations with community-based interventions and public policy, psychology can better address the complexities of work in the 21st century.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this handbook as a foundational resource for counseling psychologists, social workers, and organizational researchers seeking to broaden their understanding of vocational issues. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a comprehensive reference for those engaged in transformative scholarship and inclusive psychological practice.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2014-12-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190227494
ISBN-13:
9780190227494
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