The impact of justice climate and justice orientation on work outcomes: a cross-level multifoci framework.

H Liao, DE Rupp - Journal of Applied psychology, 2005 - psycnet.apa.org
Journal of Applied psychology, 2005psycnet.apa.org
In this article, which takes a person-situation approach, the authors propose and test a cross-
level multifoci model of workplace justice. They crossed 3 types of justice (procedural,
informational, and interpersonal) with 2 foci (organization and supervisor) and aggregated to
the group level to create 6 distinct justice climate variables. They then tested for the effects of
these variables on either organization-directed or supervisor-directed commitment,
satisfaction, and citizenship behavior. The authors also tested justice orientation as a …
Abstract
In this article, which takes a person-situation approach, the authors propose and test a cross-level multifoci model of workplace justice. They crossed 3 types of justice (procedural, informational, and interpersonal) with 2 foci (organization and supervisor) and aggregated to the group level to create 6 distinct justice climate variables. They then tested for the effects of these variables on either organization-directed or supervisor-directed commitment, satisfaction, and citizenship behavior. The authors also tested justice orientation as a moderator of these relationships. The results, based on 231 employees constituting 44 work groups representing multiple organizations and occupations, revealed that 4 forms of justice climate (organization-focused procedural and informational justice climate and supervisor-focused procedural and interpersonal justice climate) were significantly related to various work outcomes after controlling for corresponding individual-level justice perceptions. In addition, some moderation effects were found. Implications for organizations and future research are discussed.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果