The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.

The present study reports on the results from a survey which examined the relationship between demographic characteristics, perceptions of Diversity Climate, and Key Performance Indicators (Job Satisfaction, Organisational Commitment, Turnover Intention, and Meaningfulness at Work) of 232 employees...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Williams, Aoife
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70130/
_version_ 1848800606021484544
author Williams, Aoife
author_facet Williams, Aoife
author_sort Williams, Aoife
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The present study reports on the results from a survey which examined the relationship between demographic characteristics, perceptions of Diversity Climate, and Key Performance Indicators (Job Satisfaction, Organisational Commitment, Turnover Intention, and Meaningfulness at Work) of 232 employees within an East-Midlands based local authority. Social Identity Theory and The Interactional Model of Diversity are utilised to explore the relationship between demographic variables and perceptions of Diversity Climate, the relationship between perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators, as well as the relationship between demographic characteristics and Key Performance Indicators. A multiple regression model revealed a significant relationship between Perceptions of Diversity Climate, Job Satisfaction and Organisational Commitment. Furthermore, the analysis revealed that those on fixed-term contracts had higher perceptions of Diversity Climate than permanently contracted employees; Those employed for over 15 years at the organisation had higher commitment than those who had been employed for 11-14 years, and there were significant differences in Job Satisfaction between Departments of the organisation. As well as this, women had significantly higher Job Satisfaction than men; Younger employees had higher turnover intentions than older employees; Full-time workers had higher turnover intentions than part-time workers; Women had higher Meaningfulness at Work scores than Men; and Heterosexual employees had higher Meaningfulness at Work scores than LGBTQ employees. This article discusses the limitations of the present study, as well as the theoretical and practical implications of these findings for future research.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:54:14Z
format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-70130
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:54:14Z
publishDate 2022
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-701302023-06-21T14:59:53Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70130/ The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority. Williams, Aoife The present study reports on the results from a survey which examined the relationship between demographic characteristics, perceptions of Diversity Climate, and Key Performance Indicators (Job Satisfaction, Organisational Commitment, Turnover Intention, and Meaningfulness at Work) of 232 employees within an East-Midlands based local authority. Social Identity Theory and The Interactional Model of Diversity are utilised to explore the relationship between demographic variables and perceptions of Diversity Climate, the relationship between perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators, as well as the relationship between demographic characteristics and Key Performance Indicators. A multiple regression model revealed a significant relationship between Perceptions of Diversity Climate, Job Satisfaction and Organisational Commitment. Furthermore, the analysis revealed that those on fixed-term contracts had higher perceptions of Diversity Climate than permanently contracted employees; Those employed for over 15 years at the organisation had higher commitment than those who had been employed for 11-14 years, and there were significant differences in Job Satisfaction between Departments of the organisation. As well as this, women had significantly higher Job Satisfaction than men; Younger employees had higher turnover intentions than older employees; Full-time workers had higher turnover intentions than part-time workers; Women had higher Meaningfulness at Work scores than Men; and Heterosexual employees had higher Meaningfulness at Work scores than LGBTQ employees. This article discusses the limitations of the present study, as well as the theoretical and practical implications of these findings for future research. 2022-09-06 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70130/1/AW%20eDisseration.docx Williams, Aoife (2022) The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)]
spellingShingle Williams, Aoife
The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.
title The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.
title_full The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.
title_fullStr The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.
title_short The relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of Diversity Climate and Key Performance Indicators: Evidence from an East-Midlands based local authority.
title_sort relationship between demographic variables, perceptions of diversity climate and key performance indicators: evidence from an east-midlands based local authority.
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70130/