Human Resource Management Review, volume 33, issue 1, pages 100914

Subjective well-being among blue-collar immigrant employees: A systematic literature review

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-03-01
scimago Q1
SJR3.302
CiteScore20.2
Impact factor8.2
ISSN10534822, 18737889
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Applied Psychology
Abstract
We present a systematic review of 67 empirical studies that examine the factors determining subjective well-being among blue-collar immigrant employees. Drawing on conservation of resources theory, we propose an integrated conceptual framework that organizes antecedents of blue-collar immigrants' subjective well-being based on resource loss and gain dynamics. Our findings indicate that resource loss was most likely when immigrants experienced precarious employment, physically and emotionally demanding jobs, injustice at work, poor living conditions, and migration-related stressors. Conversely, resource gain was most likely when they were supported by supervisors and colleagues at work, felt emotionally supported by friends, family, and community members, and adopted personal coping strategies to manage their stressors. We conclude by signaling opportunities for future research and recommendations for practitioners seeking to augment blue-collar immigrant employees' subjective well-being. • We identify the antecedents of subjective well-being among blue-collar immigrant employees. • We propose a conceptual framework that organizes the antecedents of subjective well-being based on resource loss and gain. • Precarious employment, demanding job characteristics, poor living conditions, injustice at work, migration-related stressors limit subjective well-being. • Social support at work, emotional support from family, friends, and community members, and coping strategies improve subjective well-being.

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