Job Stress and Burnout: Research, Theory, and Intervention Perspectives

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Whiton Stewart Paine
SAGE Publications, 1982 - Psychology - 296 pages
Experts on burnout discuss in this volume its symptoms and processes, and ways of understanding the syndrome. The causes of job stress, its relationship to broader social trends, and the economic costs of burnout are also defined and analyzed. The second half of the book describes effective interventions, both with individuals and organizations.

`The book is well written and easy to read. Recommended for both lower-division and advanced undergraduates as wll as graduate or professional students interested in the topic.' -- Choice, October 1983

`...most of the papers in this collection are informative, clearly written, and stimulating. There are significant theoretical contributions as well as many pr

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Contents

Acknowledgments
11
Definitional Issues in Analyzing
29
Integrating Individual and Environmental
41
Copyright

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