What leads organizational members to collectivize? Injustice and identification as precursors of union certification
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Blader, Steven L.
署名单位:
New York University
刊物名称:
ORGANIZATION SCIENCE
ISSN/ISSBN:
1047-7039
DOI:
10.1287/orsc.1060.0217
发表日期:
2007
页码:
108-126
关键词:
ORGANIZATIONAL JUSTICE
social identity
unionization
摘要:
This paper presents the results of two studies that examine the impact of both social psychological and economic concerns on organizational members' decisions to support or oppose union formation. The studies test the predictions that procedural justice judgments and social identification-two social psychological factors that shape the nature of how people relate to their organizations-have a significant influence on people's support for union certification and on the votes they cast in a union certification election. Importantly, it was predicted that these effects would emerge even after accounting for the influence of people's economic concerns, which have been the primary focus of previous efforts to understand whether people support union formation. The results confirm these predictions and demonstrate that respondents' positions on the unionization issue are shaped by procedural justice (Studies 1 and 2) and social identity (Study 2) even after accounting for economic factors. Furthermore, Study 2 shows that the impact of procedural justice judgments on union certification was partially mediated by social identity. More generally, the results highlight the importance of integrating both social psychological and economic concerns in models designed to explain organizational phenomena such as the formation of unions.