Publication | Closed Access
"All in a Day's Work": How Follower Individual Differences and Justice Perceptions Predict OCB Role Definitions and Behavior.
222
Citations
77
References
2006
Year
Social PsychologyHuman Resource ManagementProcedural Justice PerceptionsOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesEmployee AttitudeManagementOcb Role DefinitionOrganizational PsychologyWork AttitudeSocial IdentityFollower Individual DifferencesApplied Social PsychologyRole TheoryEmployee InvolvementOrganizational CommunicationProsocial BehaviorBusinessJusticeSocial JusticeProcedural Justice
The authors draw on theories of social exchange and prosocial behavior to explain how employee perceptions of procedural justice and individual differences in reciprocation wariness, empathic concern, and perspective taking function jointly as determinants of organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) role definitions and behavior. As hypothesized, empirical findings from a field study show both direct and interactive effects of procedural justice perceptions and individual differences on OCB role definition. In turn, OCB role definitions not only predict OCB directly but also moderate the effects of procedural justice perceptions on OCB. The authors explore the implications of these findings for practice as well as research.
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