01679pab a2200205 454500008004000000100002300040245013300063260000900196300001400205362000800219520100100227650001301228650001501241650003201256773004801288908000601336909001001342999001701352952010401369180718b2009 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aLindorff, Margaret aWe are not all happy yet: attitudes to work, leadership, and high performance work practices among managers in the public sector c2009 ap.429-45. aDec aThis article explores the attitudes of male and female managers in the public sector toward high performance Human Resource Management (HRM) policies and practices, work, and organisational leadership, and compares these attitudes to those of managers in the private sector. It finds that female public sector managers are most positive about high performance HRM policies and practices. Male public sector managers are less positive than female managers in the public sector and male and female managers in the private sector across all the measures. Psychological contract theory suggests either the changes associated with high performance HRM policies and practices, or attempts to decrease the disadvantage felt by women in the public sector may have resulted in a sense of disadvantage among some men in the sector, and created a changed, more transactional psychological contract between these men and their organisation. Strategies are needed to reengage public sector men. - Reproduced. aManagers aLeadership aHuman resources development aAustralian Journal of Public Administration aN a84910 c84910d84910 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 68, Issue no: 4pAR85370r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR