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- David De Cremer, Joel Brockner, Ariel Fishman, Marius van Dijke, Woody van Olffen, and David M Mayer.
- Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
- J Appl Psychol. 2010 Mar 1; 95 (2): 291-304.
AbstractPrior research has shown that procedural fairness interacts with outcome fairness to influence employees' work attitudes (e.g., organizational commitment) and behaviors (e.g., job performance, organizational citizenship behavior), such that employees' tendencies to respond more positively to higher procedural fairness are stronger when outcome fairness is relatively low. In the present studies, we posited that people's uncertainty about their standing as organizational members would have a moderating influence on this interactive relationship between procedural fairness and outcome fairness, in that the interactive relationship was expected to be more pronounced when uncertainty was high. Using different operationalizations of uncertainty of standing (i.e., length of tenure as a proxy, along with self-reports and coworkers' reports), we found support for this hypothesis in 4 field studies spanning 3 different countries.2010 APA, all rights reserved
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