Exchanging One Uncertainty for Another: Justice Variability Negates the Benefits of Justice
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Matta, Fadel K.; Scott, Brent A.; Guo, Zhiya (Alice); Matusik, James G.
署名单位:
University System of Georgia; University of Georgia; Michigan State University; Michigan State University's Broad College of Business
刊物名称:
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0021-9010
DOI:
10.1037/apl0000425
发表日期:
2020
页码:
97-110
关键词:
ORGANIZATIONAL JUSTICE
justice variability
social identity judgments
GROUP ENGAGEMENT MODEL
experience-sampling methodology
摘要:
Although the importance of organizational justice is without question, our theoretical and empirical knowledge of the justice phenomenon is focused almost exclusively on mean levels of fair treatment. ignoring whether those mean levels are achieved in a consistent or inconsistent manner. This exclusive focus on average levels of justice is not surprising given the implicit assumption in the justice literature that day-to-day variations in justice are glossed over or reinterpreted by individuals. Building upon recent research demonstrating that variability in justice can be as important as average levels of fair treatment, we leverage tenets of uncertainty management theory to provide a conceptual bridge that integrates justice variability into the group engagement model. Our theoretical model proposes justice variability (arising from fluctuations in one's fair treatment over time) negates the very benefits that average levels of interpersonal justice provide. Results of 2, week-long experience sampling studies (one of 111 employees and one of 352 employees nested in 104 groups), used to construct assessments of day-to-day justice variability, largely supported our predictions regarding interactive effects between average levels of justice and justice variability on judgments of pride in the group and, ultimately, cooperative behavior, providing important takeaways for theory, research, and practice.
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