Exemplifying Procedural Justice While Strengthening Organizational Identification: The Complex Relationship Between Identity Leadership and Unethical Pro-Organizational Behavior
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Unethical pro-organizational behavior (UPB) aims at advantaging the organization while transgressing relevant laws or widely held norms of ethical conduct. Across three studies (Study 1 N = 138; Study 2 N = 413; Study 3 N = 139), the paper examines whether identity leadership plays as an antecedent of employees' UPB intention based on two simultaneous processes: one process related to identity leaders being perceived as exemplary group members, who model and inspire given standards of behavior as a function of the procedural justice employees experience within their workgroup; the other process related to identity leaders strengthening employees' organizational identification. The obtained results provided consistent evidence that identity leadership is associated directly with employees’ UPB intention by interacting negatively with procedural justice and that, at the same time, it is associated with it indirectly, through the mediation of organizational identification. Discussion focuses on the complexity of both UPB, where an ethical and a pro-organizational dimensions are intertwined, and identity leadership, whose contents are conditional on the meanings employees associate with their group membership.
不道德的亲组织行为(UPB)旨在使组织受益,同时违反相关法律或广泛持有的道德行为规范。在三项研究中(研究1 N = 138;研究2 N = 413;研究3 N = 139),本文基于两个同时发生的过程考察了身份领导是否作为员工UPB意图的前因:一个过程与身份领导被视为模范小组成员有关,他们作为员工在其工作组内经历的程序正义的函数,建模和激励给定的行为标准;另一个过程与认同领导者加强员工的组织认同有关。研究结果一致表明,认同领导通过与程序公正负向交互作用直接影响员工的UPB意愿,同时通过组织认同的中介作用间接影响员工的UPB意愿。讨论的重点是UPB的复杂性,在UPB中,道德和亲组织的维度交织在一起,以及身份领导,其内容取决于员工与他们的团队成员关系的意义。
期刊介绍:
Published since 1971, Journal of Applied Social Psychology is a monthly publication devoted to applications of experimental behavioral science research to problems of society (e.g., organizational and leadership psychology, safety, health, and gender issues; perceptions of war and natural hazards; jury deliberation; performance, AIDS, cancer, heart disease, exercise, and sports).