<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<article_metadata generated_at="2026-04-17T16:07:59+00:00">
  <journal>
    <title>Journal of Business and Retail Management Research</title>
    <acronym>JBRMR</acronym>
    <issn_print></issn_print>
    <issn_online>2056-6271</issn_online>
    <doi_prefix>https://doi.org/10.24052/JBRMR/</doi_prefix>
  </journal>
  <article>
    <id>581</id>
    <title>Exploring the interaction of work attitudes and the role of mechanisms in a crisis situation</title>
    <abstract>This study examines, through a critical literature review and an empirical study, the effect on employee engagement of work-related  attitudes as these develop in a crisis situation. Using as case study  the Greek financial crisis and its effect on business life &amp; organizational behaviour, the study identifies four work related attitudes - person-organisation fit, affective commitment, psychological climate and ethical leadership- examines their interaction with employee engagement, and, adopting a crisis management (CM) theoretical framework perspective, it also examines employee engagement and ethical leadership as useful and efficient mechanisms to cope with the crisis. Through a quantitative analysis of selected empirical data from a heterogeneous sample of Greek private sector employees, the study indicates that employee engagement has positive relations with person-organisation fit, affective commitment, psychological climate and ethical leadership under an economic crisis. These research findings have important implications to organizations and its decision makers dealing with a crisis. The paper concludes with implications for further research. </abstract>
    <doi>https://doi.org/10.24052/JBRMR/V17IS01/ART-07</doi>
    <url>https://www.staging.ijbed.org/details&amp;cid=581</url>
    <pdf_url>https://www.staging.ijbed.org/cdn/article_file/2022-10-31-16-52-35-PM.pdf</pdf_url>
    <volume>Volume 17</volume>
    <issue>Issue 01</issue>
    <issue_id>51</issue_id>
    <issue_published_month>2022-10-01</issue_published_month>
    <published_date>2022-10-31</published_date>
    <online_first_status></online_first_status>
    <online_first_date></online_first_date>
    <history>
      <received></received>
      <revised></revised>
      <accepted></accepted>
    </history>
    <keywords>
      <keyword>Employee engagement</keyword>
      <keyword>crisis</keyword>
      <keyword>leadership</keyword>
      <keyword>person-organisation fit</keyword>
      <keyword>affective commitment</keyword>
      <keyword>psychological climate</keyword>
    </keywords>
    <declarations>
      <funding></funding>
      <conflict_of_interest></conflict_of_interest>
      <data_availability></data_availability>
      <author_contributions></author_contributions>
    </declarations>
    <publication_notice>
      <type></type>
      <text></text>
    </publication_notice>
    <metrics>
      <views>1294674</views>
      <downloads>72</downloads>
      <citations>0</citations>
    </metrics>
    <authors>
      <author>
        <name>Evangelia Fragouli</name>
        <organization>Kingston University, UK</organization>
        <country></country>
      </author>
      <author>
        <name>Xenia M. Louka</name>
        <organization>Hellenic Open University, Greece</organization>
        <country></country>
      </author>
    </authors>
    <supplementary_materials/>
  </article>
</article_metadata>
