Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
A Comparative Study of Meaning of Working and Work Values in Developed and Developing Countries. / Zavyalova, E.; Akinshina, A.; Ardichvili, A.; Kuchinke, K. Peter; Cseh, M.; Nemeskéri Z., [Unknown]; Tynaliev, U.
In: International Journal of Transition and Innovation Systems, Vol. 1, No. 3, 2011, p. 207-227.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - A Comparative Study of Meaning of Working and Work Values in Developed and Developing Countries
AU - Zavyalova, E.
AU - Akinshina, A.
AU - Ardichvili, A.
AU - Kuchinke, K. Peter
AU - Cseh, M.
AU - Nemeskéri Z., [Unknown]
AU - Tynaliev, U.
N1 - A Comparative Study of Meaning of Working and Work Values in Developed and Developing Countries / E. Zavyalova [etc] // International Journal of Transition and Innovation Systems. - 2011. - Volume 1, № 3. - P. 207-227.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - This article presents the results of a comparative study of the meaning of work and work values in developed capitalist and developing post-socialist countries. The authors utilised the meaning of working (MOW) methodology. The study sample consisted of 724 respondents from five countries: Hungary, Russia, Kyrgyzstan, Germany and the USA. The value of work in relation to other life domains differed among countries: for Hungary and Russia, the value of work came after family and leisure, while in other countries work took second place in importance after family. Moreover, in Hungary and Russia overall value of work was significantly lower than in other countries. The items that differentiated between developed (Germany and the USA) and developing countries (Hungary, Russia, Kyrgyzstan) are: importance of income, status, interesting contacts, and interesting work. For the cluster of developing countries, the value of these items was significantly lower, signifying a presence of avoidance motivation that is oppo
AB - This article presents the results of a comparative study of the meaning of work and work values in developed capitalist and developing post-socialist countries. The authors utilised the meaning of working (MOW) methodology. The study sample consisted of 724 respondents from five countries: Hungary, Russia, Kyrgyzstan, Germany and the USA. The value of work in relation to other life domains differed among countries: for Hungary and Russia, the value of work came after family and leisure, while in other countries work took second place in importance after family. Moreover, in Hungary and Russia overall value of work was significantly lower than in other countries. The items that differentiated between developed (Germany and the USA) and developing countries (Hungary, Russia, Kyrgyzstan) are: importance of income, status, interesting contacts, and interesting work. For the cluster of developing countries, the value of these items was significantly lower, signifying a presence of avoidance motivation that is oppo
KW - meaning of working
KW - MOW
KW - post-socialist countries
KW - transition economies
KW - Russia
KW - Kyrgyzstan
KW - Hungary
KW - Germany
KW - United States
KW - USA
KW - work values
KW - developing countries
KW - developed countries
KW - avoidance motivation
KW - achievement motivation.
M3 - Article
VL - 1
SP - 207
EP - 227
JO - International Journal of Transition and Innovation Systems
JF - International Journal of Transition and Innovation Systems
SN - 1745-0071
IS - 3
ER -
ID: 5319997