Publication | Closed Access
Anti-social Actions of Committed Organizational Participants: An Existential Psychoanalytic Perspective
131
Citations
13
References
1987
Year
Psychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyOrganizational SocializationExistentialismManagement'Ontological FunctionOrganizational PsychologyPerceived ThreatsSocial IdentitySocial OrganizationOrganizational ResearchOrganizational CommitmentCommitment ModelSocial Identity TheoryOrganizational IdentityOrganizational CommunicationCommitted Organizational ParticipantsSociologyOrganization TheoryBusiness
Anti-social actions of organizationally committed individuals are explained on the basis of the 'ontological function' of organizations. This is the function of providing a sense of identity, or Being, to participants whose identity is in question. The identity that thus develops is threatened by perceived threats to the organization, and anti-social action can result. It is shown how the development of the potentiality for such anti-social action is built into the process of socialization for organizational commitment.
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