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Do psychological contracts include boundaryless or protean careers?

Cherlyn Skromme Granrose (Berry College, Campbell School of Business, Mt Berry, Georgia, USA)
Patricia A. Baccili (The Organizational Consulting Group, Seattle, Washington, USA)

Career Development International

ISSN: 1362-0436

Article publication date: 1 February 2006

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Abstract

Purpose

To examine the existence of career psychological contracts and consequences of perceived violations for traditional, protean and boundaryless career psychological contracts in one sample of aerospace employees.

Design/methodology/approach

Structured questionnaires were used to collect data. Regression analysis was used to test hypotheses.

Findings

Most employees consider traditional career goals like job security and upward mobility important, but believed the organization failed to meet these perceived obligations. Perceived violations of psychological contract obligations for job security and training reduced organizational commitment, and violations of perceived upward mobility opportunity obligations were related to intentions to leave. Employees' commitment to managers moderated the effect of low levels of organizational career contract violations, but had no effect on intentions to leave if managers violated psychological career contracts or if the organization had a high level of perceived career psychological contract violations.

Originality/value

Organizations could benefit from providing more training in career support for managers and scholars should examine organizational and managerial psychological contracts as separate constructs.

Keywords

Citation

Skromme Granrose, C. and Baccili, P.A. (2006), "Do psychological contracts include boundaryless or protean careers?", Career Development International, Vol. 11 No. 2, pp. 163-182. https://doi.org/10.1108/13620430610651903

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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