NCJ Number
70803
Date Published
1980
Length
140 pages
Annotation
The third volume of a four-part report on assessing the feasibility of applying human resources methods developed in the private sector to problems in the criminal justice system, this volume reviews and discusses the major human resources processes which are fundamentally related to the job.
Abstract
The major processes treated in individual papers in this volume are role/task definition; job design, construction, and alteration; occupational classification; and job evaluation. The paper on role/task definition discusses some of the basic concepts for constructing jobs in ways which will permit accomplishment of organizational goals, particularly a 'developmental process.' This process consists of such steps as clearly identifying and refining worker actions, refining task role configurations, and evaluating links. The paper on job design concerns the design of work and reviews the literature pertaining to techniques for altering jobs, as well as the nature of the relationship between job characteristics and worker response. The other two papers review activities and differences. The paper on occupational classification describes methods for casting various jobs into a standard language in order to compare and categorize them; the final paper on job evaluation presents methods used to categorize jobs in terms of their relative worth to the organization and the employee. Individual papers provide references. Tables and footnotes are also included. For other volumes in this report, see NCJ 70801-02 and 70804. (Author abstract modified)