Publication | Closed Access
“Being true to oneself”: the interplay of responsible leadership and authenticity on multi-level outcomes
47
Citations
63
References
2021
Year
Multi-level OutcomesAuthentic LeadershipAutonomyOrganizational BehaviorManagementRelational Social CapitalOrganizational PsychologyResponsible LeadershipSocial IdentityStakeholder TheoryArtsTrustOrganizational ResearchCorporate Social ResponsibilityEducational LeadershipLeadershipResponsible Management EducationOrganizational CommunicationBusinessEthical LeadershipLeadership Development“ BeingSocial Responsibility
Purpose Drawing on stakeholder theory, this study examines the relationship between responsible leadership and its macro-, meso- and micro-level outcomes. Further, this study investigates the moderating role of authenticity on the relationship between responsible leadership and its multi-level effects, i.e. relational social capital, corporate social performance and community citizenship behaviour among employees. Design/methodology/approach The authors conducted four field studies using the quantitative methodology to test the hypotheses. In study 1 ( N = 236), by adopting a multi-wave and multi-source research design, the authors examine the relationship between responsible leadership, authenticity and relational social capital. In study 2 ( N = 203), by adopting a multi-wave research design, the authors examine the relationship between responsible leadership, authenticity and corporate social performance. In study 3 ( N = 203), by adopting a multi-wave and multi-source research design, the authors examine the relationship between responsible leadership, authenticity and employees' community citizenship behaviour. In study 4 ( N = 257), by adopting a multi-wave and multi-source research design, the authors capture the impact of responsible leadership on outcomes (social capital, corporate social performance and community citizenship behaviour) with a boundary condition of authenticity. Findings The authors find that responsible leadership enhances relational social capital, improves a firm's social performance and develops community citizenship behaviour among employees. Further, the study finds that authenticity positively moderates the relationship between responsible leadership and its multi-level outcomes. Originality/value First, it is a maiden study to investigate the multi-level outcomes of RL in a series of three empirical studies. Second, it contributes to RL literature by testing a unique moderating role of authenticity between RL and its multi-level outcomes of relational social capital, corporate social performance and employees' community citizenship behaviour. This study also provides empirical evidence for the multi-level implications of stakeholder theory.
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