BEING DIFFERENT - RELATIONAL DEMOGRAPHY AND ORGANIZATIONAL ATTACHMENT
成果类型:
Review
署名作者:
TSUI, AS; EGAN, TD; OREILLY, CA
署名单位:
University of California System; University of California Berkeley
刊物名称:
ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0001-8392
DOI:
10.2307/2393472
发表日期:
1992
页码:
549-579
关键词:
JOB-SATISFACTION
EMPLOYEE TURNOVER
Meta-analysis
INTERGROUP RELATIONS
TOKEN WOMEN
COMMITMENT
work
absenteeism
MODEL
Similarity
摘要:
We used self-categorization theory-which proposes that people may use social characteristics such as age, race, or organizational membership to define psychological groups and to promote a positive self-identity-to develop and test hypotheses about the effects of demographic diversity in organizations on an individual's psychological and behavioral attachment to the organization. Individual-level commitment, attendance behavior, and tenure intentions were examined as a function of the individual's degree of difference from others on such social categories as age, tenure, education, sex, and race. We expected that the effect of being different would have different effects for minorities (i.e., women and nonwhites) than for members of the majority (i.e., men and whites). Analyses of a sample of 151 groups comprising 1,705 respondents showed that increasing work-unit diversity was associated with lower levels of psychological attachment among group members. Nonsymmetrical effects were found for sex and race, with whites and men showing larger negative effects for increased unit heterogeneity than nonwhites and women. The results of the study call into question the fundamental assumption that underlies much of race and gender research in organizations-that the effect of heterogeneity is always felt by the minority.
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