Track 3: Work, Well-being, and Human Resource Architectures

Relevant AOM Divisions/Interest Groups: OB, HR, DEI, MSR, CMS, MOC

This track invites scholarship that critically explores the human experience of work in service-intensive contexts, with particular attention to the psychological, relational, spiritual, ethical, and identity-based dimensions of organising. We welcome contributions that examine how HR architectures, leadership practices, and institutional arrangements shape employee wellbeing, dignity, and sustainable performance.

Illustrative Sub-Themes

  • Workplace wellbeing, digital detox, and inclusive HR support systems in hospitality and tourism contexts
  • Emotional labour, dignity of work, and meaningful employment, including identity work, aesthetic labour, invisible labour, and commodification of affect.
  • Talent management, precarity, and emerging career forms, such as gig work, portfolio careers, boundaryless careers, and algorithmically managed labour.
  • Psychological safety, inclusion, and belonging, with attention to diversity, equity, voice, and relational justice in service organisations.
  • Spirituality, purpose, and ethics at work, including meaning-making, moral injury, values-based leadership, and ethical tensions in service work.

Indicative Research Questions

  • How do hospitality and tourism organisations design HR systems that support psychological recovery, inclusion, and sustainable work intensities?
  • How do high-contact service roles transform employee identity, wellbeing, and moral experience of work?
  • What configurations of HR systems and people-management architectures support both organisational performance and human sustainability in emotionally-charged service contexts?
  • How do power, inequality, and voice operate in shaping everyday work experiences and career trajectories?
  • How do employees construct meaning, purpose, and ethical agency in emotionally and morally complex work environments?
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