Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
359808 Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Developmental instability characterizes the late teens and twenties in today's late-modern society. The present study (a) focused on the link between instability and both general (i.e., self-esteem and depressive symptoms) and work-related outcomes (i.e., work engagement and burnout) and (b) investigated the possible moderating role of identity capital acquisition (as assessed through sense of adulthood and community integration) in a sample of 202 emerging adult employees. Results indicated that instability was negatively related to self-esteem, positively to depressive symptoms, and unrelated to most components of work engagement and burnout. Several of these main effects, however, were moderated by sense of adulthood. Instability substantially impacted on several components of job burnout and work engagement when sense of adulthood was low. When sense of adulthood was high, these detrimental effects were no longer present. Implications and suggestions for future research are outlined.

Research Highlights► We examine whether identity capital protects against the instability of emerging adulthood. ► Identity capital assesses subjective sense of adulthood and community integration. ► Emerging adult employees are sampled with a primary focus on work engagement and burnout. ► Instability is related to more depressive symptoms and lower self-esteem. ► Achieving a sense of adulthood protects against experienced instability.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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