

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
E-ISSN: 1838-6059|13|2|101-114
ISSN: 1323-8922
Source: Australian Journal of Rehabilitation Counselling, Vol.13, Iss.2, 2007-09, pp. : 101-114
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Abstract
Burnout is an occupationally based syndrome that develops as a result of prolonged and cumulative stress. The experience of burnout has been documented in detail in a variety of human service professions. The purpose of this article is two-fold: to provide an alternative theoretical perspective on the development of burnout, which suggests it is not stressors per se that are responsible for burnout development; and, to use this alternative perspective as an explanation for burnout in the context of another human service profession — humanitarian work. Using the passion for activities notion conceptualised by Vallerand and colleagues (2003), it is explained how a lack of self-determination and autonomy leads to the development of an
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