Nathan, Ganesh

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Nathan, Ganesh

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Meaningful work, employeeship and well-being: Bringing employees’ dignity in the workplace

2018-06-20, Nathan, Ganesh

Meaningfulness work has been gaining significance since the beginning of the 21st Century. This paper attempts to clarify the meaning of meaningful work as a moral issue and how it is linked to employee’s well‐being by introducing a concept of ‘employeeship’ to bring dignity at workplace. It critiques work-life balance and argues for integrating meaningful work within the work-life continuum. Employee engagement has recently become a significant topic both within human resources management consultancy and academic research. However, there are many different meanings associated with employee engagement and a variety of factors have been identified and proposed for employee engagement. These factors although may contribute to meaningfulness of work, meaningful activity is not clearly liked to well‐being. Therefore, this paper shows the link between meaningful activity and well‐being and argues for the just context rooted in self-respect to bring employees’ dignity at workplace. It introduces a concept of ‘employeeship’ and shows the importance of normative context of well‐being. It conceptualizes employeeship for ‘self‐leading’ which is constituted by autonomy, ownership and responsibility. Leadership without counterpart of employeeship can lead to undermining employees’ dignity through depriving their self-respect. This paper further attempts to show that the minimal and common conditions of freedom as non‐domination and recognition for employeeship can lead to skilful performance of employees facing fair challenges. Based on these conceptual understanding, this paper briefly discusses some implications for management in terms of leadership and concludes with further research directions in this important topic of interest.

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Re-theorizing the firm

2012-07, Nathan, Ganesh

This paper attempts to re-theorize the firm from a socio-political perspective to show that a firm is not only an economic, but also a social and a political actor. Given the multiple global crises, our traditional understanding of the purpose of the firm – the maximization of shareholder value – is increasingly being challenged. This paper shows that the purpose of the firm is rooted in our social life, and hence a notion of well-being and social justice gains significance rather than wealth creation to underscore the role of responsible governance for sustainability in many dimensions – economic, social and environmental. It concludes that the purpose of the firm should go beyond profit maximization of shareholders in pursuit of well-being of stakeholders and in deliberating global social justice for a sustainable world order.

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Meaningful work, employeeship and well-being

2017-06-15, Nathan, Ganesh

This paper attempts to clarify the meaning of meaningful work and how it is linked to employee’s well‐being and thereby suggests some managerial implications for leadership, organizational structure and employee engagement. First, it briefly shows the different kinds of work performed for both market‐based wages such as manual work and knowledge work and non‐wages work such as domestic work, charity work etc., and traces the value of work from Marxist to the capitalist perspectives. In doing so, this paper attempts to illustrate that many types of work have become a commodity and disconnected to the essence of being performed by human. Although this is not surprising as many of the manual and repetitive works are being replaced by robots, there are many types of work that are still performed by humans without much regard to their well‐being. The meaning of work is heavily emphasized on the economic value and neglects the social value along with how a meaning may be ascribed by an employee in terms of affective, cognitive and attitudinal aspects. Second, it attempts to identify leadership and organizational factors that affect employee engagement that can contribute to their meaningful work and well‐being. Employee engagement has recently become a significant topic both within human resources management consultancy and academic research. However, there are many different meanings associated with employee engagement and a variety of factors have been identified and proposed for employee engagement. These factors although may contribute to meaningfulness of work, meaningful activity is not clearly liked to well‐being. Therefore, third, this paper shows the link between meaningful activity and well‐being and raises the concept of ‘employeeship’. The idea here is not to develop a theory of well‐being or to reduce to a master value with a reductionist impulse to say ‘happiness’ per se or to any other values but to show the importance of normative context of well‐being and how a work consisting of meaningful activities for an employee can contribute to positive employee engagement and thereby contributing to their well‐being. Hence, employeeship for ‘self‐leading’, constituted by autonomy, ownership and personal responsibility, is advocated instead of leadership focused on employees to be led or to be managed as resources. This paper further attempts to show that some minimal and common conditions, freedom as non‐domination and recognition, for employeeship can lead to skilful performance of employees facing their fair challenges. Based on these conceptual understanding, this paper briefly discusses some implications for management in terms of leadership, organizational design and employee engagement and suggests further research both theoretical and empirical in this important topic of interest.

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Publikation

Towards re-theorizing the firm in pursuit of well-being and social justice

2015, Nathan, Ganesh, Coutinho de Arruda, Maria Cecilia, Rok, Boleslaw

This paper attempts to provide some directions for re-theorizing the firm from a socio-political perspective to underscore how the purpose of the firm is rooted in our societal life, and hence a notion of well-being and social justice of stakeholders gains significance rather than wealth creation for shareholders as the sole purpose of the firm. This paper concludes that such an approach has some implications for responsible governance through stakeholder deliberation for social justice.