Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia

Volume: 4 Number: 1 January 16, 2016
EN

Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia

Abstract

Past literature suggests that leadership style impacts employee attitudes and job performance in organizations. Given the broad scope of military operations, there are many situations in military where military managers supervise civilian employees.  Our empirical study explores the effects of Army sergeant supervision of civilian employees at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.  Eight themes in Army sergeants’ perceptions as supervisor of federal civilian employees were studied in-depth: (a) task, (b) education training, (c) family, (d) rules & regulations, (e) open communications, (f) last minute task, (g) direct leadership, and (h) experience.  Our findings show that mismatch between leader perceptions and employee expectations lead to stress and absenteeism. Implications for future research and suggestions to reduce stress and absenteeism are discussed.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

-

Journal Section

-

Publication Date

January 16, 2016

Submission Date

July 13, 2015

Acceptance Date

-

Published in Issue

Year 2016 Volume: 4 Number: 1

APA
Williams, C., & Chinta, R. (2016). Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Journal of Management and Information Science, 4(1), 6-18. https://doi.org/10.17858/jmisci.52002
AMA
1.Williams C, Chinta R. Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia. JMISCI. 2016;4(1):6-18. doi:10.17858/jmisci.52002
Chicago
Williams, Carey, and Ravi Chinta. 2016. “Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia”. Journal of Management and Information Science 4 (1): 6-18. https://doi.org/10.17858/jmisci.52002.
EndNote
Williams C, Chinta R (January 1, 2016) Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Journal of Management and Information Science 4 1 6–18.
IEEE
[1]C. Williams and R. Chinta, “Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia”, JMISCI, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 6–18, Jan. 2016, doi: 10.17858/jmisci.52002.
ISNAD
Williams, Carey - Chinta, Ravi. “Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia”. Journal of Management and Information Science 4/1 (January 1, 2016): 6-18. https://doi.org/10.17858/jmisci.52002.
JAMA
1.Williams C, Chinta R. Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia. JMISCI. 2016;4:6–18.
MLA
Williams, Carey, and Ravi Chinta. “Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia”. Journal of Management and Information Science, vol. 4, no. 1, Jan. 2016, pp. 6-18, doi:10.17858/jmisci.52002.
Vancouver
1.Carey Williams, Ravi Chinta. Stress and Absenteeism in Civilian Employees Supervised by Army Sergeants: Empirical Evidence from Fort Belvoir, Virginia. JMISCI. 2016 Jan. 1;4(1):6-18. doi:10.17858/jmisci.52002