Publication | Closed Access
Empowerment and initiative: the mediating role of obligation
22
Citations
54
References
2019
Year
Workplace PsychologyProject ManagementAgency (Feminist Philosophy)AutonomyOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesEmployee AttitudeManagementOrganizational PsychologyWork AttitudeCivic EngagementAgency (Social Cognitive Psychology)Swedish OrganizationFelt ObligationCommunity EmpowermentMotivationOrganizational CommitmentApplied Social PsychologyRole TheoryEmployee InvolvementPersonal InitiativeCollective IntentionalityPerformance StudiesOrganizational CommunicationEthical LeadershipAccountabilityArtsSocial Responsibility
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the extent to which psychological empowerment and felt obligation can explain variations in personal initiative. Design/methodology/approach Employees from a Swedish organization participated in a web-based survey. Findings Psychological empowerment is important for enhancing proactive behavior at work, but its dimensions relate differently to personal initiative. Felt obligation mediates the relationship between psychological empowerment and personal initiative, but only for two dimensions of empowerment (meaningfulness and competence). Originality/value The paper contributes to our understanding of how employees’ feeling of obligation explains one form of proactive behavior. It also highlights the overlooked distinctiveness of psychological empowerment dimensions in predicting personal initiative at work.
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