This article proposes that media representations of an occupational category may intersect with organizations’ efforts to construct a positive organizational identity and image. We fuse three streams of literature namely, organizational identity and image, media and the social construction of reality, and dirty work to extend extant literature on organizational identity and image. Attention is drawn to occupational image as the position of an occupational category in society. We contend that occupational image is likely to influence the decisions and actions taken by organizations and its members, in particular when the occupation is central to the organization’s mission. Occupational image is partly informed by the media. We analyse one ye...
This article will define the context in which sex work is referred to along with the different types...
Dirty work refers to occupations that are viewed by society as physically, socially, or morally tain...
Article en libre accès : http://www.tpmap.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Vol-23-n.3-articolo-1.pdfIn...
E.C. Hughes (1958) defines dirty work as work perceived as physically, socially, or morally tainte...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore how a group of dirty workers, that is, exotic danc...
There is a plethora of research in organization studies that explores identity at work. Most of this...
Dirty work is defined by Hughes (1958) as tasks that are \u201cphysically, socially, or morally\u201...
We further the research to date on ambiguity, ambivalence and contradiction in organisation studies ...
This paper reports a longitudinal field study on the effects of positive media coverage on the re-co...
This article is a critical exploration of the professionalization of public relations as a struggle ...
This article reviews the growing literature on dirty work i.e. work that is seen as disgusting or de...
Purpose – This study adopts the popular culture lens to investigate the collective understanding beh...
This article is based on a semiotic analysis of corporate websites in the lap dancing industry. Form...
This article explores how a group of exotic dancers do gender and manage the stigma associated with ...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Organizational leaders may respond to employee nonwork behavio...
This article will define the context in which sex work is referred to along with the different types...
Dirty work refers to occupations that are viewed by society as physically, socially, or morally tain...
Article en libre accès : http://www.tpmap.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Vol-23-n.3-articolo-1.pdfIn...
E.C. Hughes (1958) defines dirty work as work perceived as physically, socially, or morally tainte...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore how a group of dirty workers, that is, exotic danc...
There is a plethora of research in organization studies that explores identity at work. Most of this...
Dirty work is defined by Hughes (1958) as tasks that are \u201cphysically, socially, or morally\u201...
We further the research to date on ambiguity, ambivalence and contradiction in organisation studies ...
This paper reports a longitudinal field study on the effects of positive media coverage on the re-co...
This article is a critical exploration of the professionalization of public relations as a struggle ...
This article reviews the growing literature on dirty work i.e. work that is seen as disgusting or de...
Purpose – This study adopts the popular culture lens to investigate the collective understanding beh...
This article is based on a semiotic analysis of corporate websites in the lap dancing industry. Form...
This article explores how a group of exotic dancers do gender and manage the stigma associated with ...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Organizational leaders may respond to employee nonwork behavio...
This article will define the context in which sex work is referred to along with the different types...
Dirty work refers to occupations that are viewed by society as physically, socially, or morally tain...
Article en libre accès : http://www.tpmap.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Vol-23-n.3-articolo-1.pdfIn...