A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Interpersonal Conflict in Construction: Cost, Cause, and Consequence
Interpersonal conflict on the job is identified as one of the top occupational job stressors, strongly linked to a reduction in worker psychological and physical health. In addition, interpersonal conflict has been identified as a determinant of work disability, occupational accidents, and other costs related to reduced quality, loss of skilled employees, restructuring inefficiencies, decreased motivation and productivity, absenteeism, and employee turnover. For the construction industry, studies suggest that construction owners and contractors ranked conflict among construction project participants as the highest factor affecting project cost. It is astonishing, in light of this fact, that no research studies exist which attempt to expose the unmistakable financial cost of day-to-day conflict in the construction industry among project participants at the supervisory and trades level. Therefore, the research question being explored is: What are the triggers and consequences of interpersonal conflict on a construction site and at what financial cost? Using the critical-incident technique, a qualitative research method, 74 construction industry personnel were individually interviewed using a protocol designed to elicit one or more conflict incidents recalled by the interviewee. All interviews were audio taped, transcribed, and analyzed using Nvivo 9 qualitative software. Forty-one of the 86 reported incidents underwent an additional analysis using the time reported and associated labor costs. Based on the key findings, it is recommended that educational opportunities and innovative changes to the construction process could reduce/prevent the incidence of interpersonal conflict on the construction jobsite.
Interpersonal Conflict in Construction: Cost, Cause, and Consequence
Interpersonal conflict on the job is identified as one of the top occupational job stressors, strongly linked to a reduction in worker psychological and physical health. In addition, interpersonal conflict has been identified as a determinant of work disability, occupational accidents, and other costs related to reduced quality, loss of skilled employees, restructuring inefficiencies, decreased motivation and productivity, absenteeism, and employee turnover. For the construction industry, studies suggest that construction owners and contractors ranked conflict among construction project participants as the highest factor affecting project cost. It is astonishing, in light of this fact, that no research studies exist which attempt to expose the unmistakable financial cost of day-to-day conflict in the construction industry among project participants at the supervisory and trades level. Therefore, the research question being explored is: What are the triggers and consequences of interpersonal conflict on a construction site and at what financial cost? Using the critical-incident technique, a qualitative research method, 74 construction industry personnel were individually interviewed using a protocol designed to elicit one or more conflict incidents recalled by the interviewee. All interviews were audio taped, transcribed, and analyzed using Nvivo 9 qualitative software. Forty-one of the 86 reported incidents underwent an additional analysis using the time reported and associated labor costs. Based on the key findings, it is recommended that educational opportunities and innovative changes to the construction process could reduce/prevent the incidence of interpersonal conflict on the construction jobsite.
Interpersonal Conflict in Construction: Cost, Cause, and Consequence
Brockman, Julie L. (author)
2013-11-18
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Interpersonal Conflict in Construction: Cost, Cause, and Consequence
Online Contents | 2014
|Interpersonal Conflict in Construction: Cost, Cause, and Consequence
British Library Online Contents | 2014
|Emerald Group Publishing | 2025
|Interictal vascular changes in migraine: cause or consequence?
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2002
|Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Cell Senescence: Cause or Consequence?
British Library Online Contents | 2006
|