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    Theorizing the notion of well-being in Islam: An update of Ryff's theory of eudaimonic psychological well-being

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    Journal Community Psychology - 2022 - Koburtay.pdf (999.1Kb)
    Date
    2022-01-08
    Author
    Koburtay, Tamer
    Syed, Jawad
    Salhi, Nidal Al
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    Abstract
    Prior studies suggest that knowledge about workers' psychological well-being is overly focused on materialism or biologically-based understanding, not taking into account the role of spirituality in one's well-being. Drawing on Ryff's (1989) psychological well-being framework and using an interdisciplinary approach, this paper offers a model of 'well-being in Islam' through theorizing this concept from an Islamic lens and contextually studying the implications of Islamic practices and spiritual facilities for employees' psychological well-being in workplaces. Drawing on qualitative data collected from 22 employees, our model (findings) shows that worshipping Allah, contemplative practices, and patience are key elements of one's well-being. This paper also points towards the important role of specific spiritual provisions (e.g., designated rooms for prayer, prayer time and ablution facilities) and contemplative practices (e.g., ritualistic-cyclic, creative process, generative, movement practices, stillness, activist, relational) for Ryff's six dimensions of employees' eudaimonic well-being. This study is unique as it integrates the notion of well-being in Islam into management and organization studies and offers a novel and contextual extension of Ryff's theory by integrating a spiritual notion of well-being. In the end, theoretical and practical implications are offered.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85122690103&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcop.22790
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/42336
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    • Management & Marketing [‎791‎ items ]

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