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Co-workers' Justice Judgments, own Justice Judgments and Employee Commitment: A multi-foci approach Cover

Co-workers' Justice Judgments, own Justice Judgments and Employee Commitment: A multi-foci approach

Open Access
|Jun 2008

Abstract

Using a sample of 212 employees, we conducted a study to examine whether employees use their co-workers' fairness perceptions to generate their own justice judgments and to develop their subsequent affective commitment. The conceptual framework used to investigate these linkages is social exchange theory combined with a multiple foci approach. Results of the structural equation modeling analyses revealed that co-workers' procedural justice judgments strengthened employee's own procedural justice judgments, which in turn influenced their affective commitment to the organisation. Similarly, co-workers' interactional justice judgments increased employee's own interactional justice judgments, which in turn impacted on their affective commitment to both the supervisor and the organisation. As a whole, findings suggest that coworkers' justice judgments strengthened employee's affective attachments toward the justice sources by reinforcing employee's own justice perceptions.
Language: English
Published on: Jun 1, 2008
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2008 Florence Stinglhamber, David De Cremer, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.