ABSTRACT

A sustainable European workforce has become increasingly relevant in our present day and age. Flexibility and job insecurity are omnipresent; organizational workforces are displaying growing diversity with respect to age, gender, ethnicity and family status; and Europe’s welfare states are delegating more and more responsibility for the well-being of workers to employers. Now more so than ever, organizations need to consider investing in workers to improve their performance and level of satisfaction. These investments can take many forms, including flexible work arrangements, training plans, child-related policies and health programs. The crucial question is how to make this happen. Why do some organizations invest more and others less in their employees? Why do some employees make use of these investments and while others do not? Why do such investments sometimes improve employee performance and satisfaction and sometimes not? This book addresses precisely these questions. The book contributes a new, large-scale survey of 259 organizations, 869 work units, and 11,011 employees in six diverse economic sectors in the Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and UK to study the causes and consequences of organizational investments.

This book appeals to undergraduate and postgraduate students, researchers and lecturers in the fields of Sociology, Business and Management, and Organizational Studies. It will also be useful for practitioners of Human Resource Management and others interested in workforce sustainability.

part I|2 pages

Organizations and their employees in a sustainable workforce

chapter 1|14 pages

A sustainable workforce in Europe

Bringing the organization back in

chapter 3|20 pages

Collecting cross-country comparative multilevel data in organizations

The research design of the European Sustainable Workforce Survey

part II|2 pages

A comparative approach to which organizations invest in employees

chapter 5|20 pages

Investments in working parents

The use of parental leave

chapter 7|18 pages

Worksite health promotion in European organizations

Availability according to employers and employees

chapter 8|13 pages

Immigrants’ access to employer-provided professional training within firms

An analysis for the United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands

part III|2 pages

Returns on investments in a sustainable workforce for employers and employees

chapter 9|16 pages

HR investments in an employable workforce

Mutual gains or conflicting outcomes?

chapter 10|14 pages

Temporary contracts, job uncertainty, and work–life balance

A multilevel study across European organizations

chapter 11|15 pages

Human capital investments and the value of work

Comparing employees and solo self-employed workers

chapter 14|9 pages

A sustainable workforce in Europe

Future challenges