Article

Security Abeyance: Coping with the Erosion of Job Conditions and Treatment

Details

Citation

Hallier J (2000) Security Abeyance: Coping with the Erosion of Job Conditions and Treatment. British Journal of Management, 11 (1), pp. 71-89. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8551.00152

Abstract
The construct of security abeyance is proposed to explain how general insecurity might commonly arise during organizational restructuring. Security abeyance refers to feelings of general insecurity that emerge in work settings where there is an absence of information about the meaning and intention of organizational change. The value of the abeyance construct is explored using a study of change in the air traffic sector. For security abeyance to emerge, unreadable management actions needed to be also accompanied by confusions about the worker's organizational value. In the face of an enduring frustration of meaning, initial, neutral attempts at sensemaking gave way to more proactive efforts to provoke management into clarifying workers' futures. Resolution of the abeyance predicament was found to require workers to let go of attempts to evaluate their current, personal worth to the organization and to extensively re-evaluate their long-term relationship with management. However, the emergence of highly distrustful worker constructions of management did not affect other, established organizational attachments. The case for developing security abeyance research is made.

Journal
British Journal of Management: Volume 11, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2000
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/10937
PublisherWiley-Blackwell for the British Academy of Management
ISSN1045-3172