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A volume in Research in Social Issues in Management Series Editors:
Stephen W. Gilliland, The University of Arizona, Dirk D. Steiner,
Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis and Daniel P. Skarlicki, The
University of British Columbia This volume in Research in Social
Issues in Management expands our understanding of organizational
justice and applies justice theories to develop models of ethical
behavior in organizations. At a time of global economic recession
and frequent business and accounting scandals, many people are
questioning the ethics of business leaders. Whether these
challenges are actual or perceived, models grounded in
organizational justice theories provide powerful insights and
suggest new ways of looking at leadership ethics. By examining what
it means to be just and examining relationships between justice and
ethicality, the chapters in this volume have provided conceptual
models for understanding ethical challenges facing organizations.
The chapters are organized around two related themes. The first
theme is expanding models of organizational justice. After 30 years
of research, a natural question is whether we have reached the
useful limits in developing theories of organizational justice. The
clear answer you will see after reading these chapters is no, as
each chapter pushes our thinking in new directions. The second
theme is applying organizational justice theories to develop models
of ethical and unethical behavior in organizations. The models
address topics of greed, dehumanization, and moral contracts.
This eighth volume in the Research in Social Issues in Management
series explores a variety of social relations to expand our
thinking about organizational justice, which is fundamentally based
on relationships between organizational authorities and the
employees of the organizations. These relationships also emphasize
the roles of various actors and suggest fairness perspectives other
than that of subordinates' perceptions of the treatment received
from their superiors. The 10 chapters of the volume are divided
into two major sections plus a conclusion. The first section
presents five chapters that bring new theoretical perspectives to
bear on justice considerations. Topics treated throughout this
section include conflicting perspectives on justice, psychological
distance, greed, and punishment. The second section placesemphasis
on leaders' or managers' perspectives of justice, going back to
some of the initial proactive roots of justice rather than on what
has become the more traditional focus, that of subordinate
perceptions or reactive justice. In the contributions comprising
this section, leaders' personalities, their motives, and their
position as both superiors of some employees and subordinates of
their own superiors are examined to provide new perspectives on the
leadership role in justice matters. The concluding chapter, by
Brockner and Carter, comments on the collection of chapters and
proposes extensions and alternative perspectives for consideration.
This commentary chapter suggests that the volume surfs a fifth wave
in the history of justice research as these chapters all examine
justice as a dependent variable influenced by numerous factors.
This volume provides up-to-date reviews of the research on a number
of social and ethical issues of increasing concern confronting
today's managers and organizations. The authors, who are recognized
international experts on the topics they treat, provide new
theories and innovative perspectives on these issues. Further, they
use a research base to identify ways for managers and human
resources professionals to address these issues in their
organizations. Given its breadth of coverage, practitioners faced
with these issues, as well as researchers and graduate students in
management and organizational psychology, should find this volume
of interest. This collection of ten chapters provides the cutting
edge on a number of the most pressing challenges in management
today. Readers of the volume will discover new models, innovative
theoretical approaches, comprehensive reviews, theoretical and
methodological critiques, and specific and insightful suggestions
for research on these different social and ethical issues facing
organizations. Perhaps more importantly, the practical suggestions
that come from the research provide a useful bridge between what we
know and what we can do to address these challenges, and thus
contribute, even in a small way, to workplaces that respect ethics
and individuals in all their diversity.
CONTENTS: Preface. Kees van den Bos, Stephen W. Gilliland, Dirk D.
Steiner, and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Part I: Developing Theories of
Fairness Motivation. Wanting is Believing: Understanding
Psychological Processes in Organizational Justice by Examining
Perceptions of Fairness. Steven L. Blader and D. Ramona Bobocel.
The Battle Between Self-Interest and Fairness: Evidence from
Ultimatum, Dictator, and Delta Games. Eric van Dijk and Ann
Tenbrunsel. Images of Justice: Development of Justice Integration
Theory. Stephen W. Gilliland and Layne Paddock. Interpersonal and
Informational Justice: Identifying the Differential Antecedents of
Interactional Justice Behaviors. Suzanne S. Masterson, Zinta S.
Byrne, and Hua Mao. Part II: Applying Theories to Managerial
Decisions. An Accessible Identity Approach to Understanding
Fairness in Organizational Settings. Linda J. Skitka and Jesus
Bravo. Self-Regulatory Identity Theory and Reactions Toward
Fairness Enhancing Organizational Policies. Karl Aquino, Americus
Reed II, Marcus M. Stewart, and Debra L. Shapiro. Why Managers
Don't Always do the Right Thing When Delivering Bad News: The Roles
of Empathy, Self-esteem, and Moral Development in Interactional
Fairness. David L. Patient and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Corporate
Champions: Coming to the Defense of Organizations. Carol T. Kulik.
Part III: Commentary. Some Observations and Critical Thoughts About
the Present State of Justice Theory and Research. Gerold Mikula.
Information on Contributing Authors.
A volume in Research in Social Issues in Management Series Editors:
Stephen W. Gilliland, The University of Arizona, Dirk D. Steiner,
Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis and Daniel P. Skarlicki, The
University of British Columbia This volume of Research in Social
Issues in Management critically examines theoretical underpinnings
of organizational justice and corporate social responsibility by
identifying motives underlying desires for justice and by
considering responses to injustice. The first set of chapters
explores issues of morality, emotions, and social exchange
relationships. These can be seen as engines that drive reactions to
organizational justice. The second set of chapters addresses
injustice and recovery, the social systems surrounding justice, and
the application of justice principles to organizations'
environmental and sustainability practices. A commentary chapter
highlights ten themes that cross this interesting collection of
paper on Justice, Morality, and Social Responsibility.
|
Theoretical and Cultural Perspectives on Organizational Justice (Hardcover)
Stephen W. Gilliland (University of Arizona, USA), Dirk D. Steiner (Universite de Nice Sophia-Antipolis, France), Daniel Skarlicki (University of British Columbia, Canada); Edited by Stephen W. Gilliland (University of Arizona, USA), Dirk D. Steiner (Universite de Nice Sophia-Antipolis, France), …
|
R3,042
Discovery Miles 30 420
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This volume includes essays on fairness heuristic thoery, the
problem of over and under emphasis of cultural differences and
fairness as deonance. It also offers a categorization approach to
fairness judgements, and asks if fairness is possible in disputes
among nationally-different employees.
This eighth volume in the Research in Social Issues in Management
series explores a variety of social relations to expand our
thinking about organizational justice, which is fundamentally based
on relationships between organizational authorities and the
employees of the organizations. These relationships also emphasize
the roles of various actors and suggest fairness perspectives other
than that of subordinates' perceptions of the treatment received
from their superiors. The 10 chapters of the volume are divided
into two major sections plus a conclusion. The first section
presents five chapters that bring new theoretical perspectives to
bear on justice considerations. Topics treated throughout this
section include conflicting perspectives on justice, psychological
distance, greed, and punishment. The second section placesemphasis
on leaders' or managers' perspectives of justice, going back to
some of the initial proactive roots of justice rather than on what
has become the more traditional focus, that of subordinate
perceptions or reactive justice. In the contributions comprising
this section, leaders' personalities, their motives, and their
position as both superiors of some employees and subordinates of
their own superiors are examined to provide new perspectives on the
leadership role in justice matters. The concluding chapter, by
Brockner and Carter, comments on the collection of chapters and
proposes extensions and alternative perspectives for consideration.
This commentary chapter suggests that the volume surfs a fifth wave
in the history of justice research as these chapters all examine
justice as a dependent variable influenced by numerous factors.
A volume in Research in Social Issues in ManagementSeries Editors:
Stephen W. Gilliland, The University of Arizona, Dirk D. Steiner,
Universit de Nice-Sophia Antipolisand Daniel P. Skarlicki, The
University of British ColumbiaThis volume in Research in Social
Issues in Management expands our understanding oforganizational
justice and applies justice theories to develop models of ethical
behavior inorganizations. At a time of global economic recession
and frequent business and accountingscandals, many people are
questioning the ethics of business leaders. Whether these
challengesare actual or perceived, models grounded in
organizational justice theories provide powerfulinsights and
suggest new ways of looking at leadership ethics. By examining what
it means to be just and examining relationshipsbetween justice and
ethicality, the chapters in this volume have provided conceptual
models for understanding ethical challenges facingorganizations.The
chapters are organized around two related themes. The first theme
is expanding models of organizational justice. After 30 years
ofresearch, a natural question is whether we have reached the
useful limits in developing theories of organizational justice. The
clearanswer you will see after reading these chapters is no, as
each chapter pushes our thinking in new directions. The second
theme isapplying organizational justice theories to develop models
of ethical and unethical behavior in organizations. The models
addresstopics of greed, dehumanization, and moral contracts.
A volume in Research in Social Issues in Management Series Editors:
Stephen W. Gilliland, The University of Arizona, Dirk D. Steiner,
Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis and Daniel P. Skarlicki, The
University of British Columbia This volume of Research in Social
Issues in Management critically examines theoretical underpinnings
of organizational justice and corporate social responsibility by
identifying motives underlying desires for justice and by
considering responses to injustice. The first set of chapters
explores issues of morality, emotions, and social exchange
relationships. These can be seen as engines that drive reactions to
organizational justice. The second set of chapters addresses
injustice and recovery, the social systems surrounding justice, and
the application of justice principles to organizations'
environmental and sustainability practices. A commentary chapter
highlights ten themes that cross this interesting collection of
paper on Justice, Morality, and Social Responsibility.
This volume provides up-to-date reviews of the research on a number
of social and ethical issues of increasing concern confronting
today's managers and organizations. The authors, who are recognized
international experts on the topics they treat, provide new
theories and innovative perspectives on these issues. Further, they
use a research base to identify ways for managers and human
resources professionals to address these issues in their
organizations. Given its breadth of coverage, practitioners faced
with these issues, as well as researchers and graduate students in
management and organizational psychology, should find this volume
of interest. This collection of ten chapters provides the cutting
edge on a number of the most pressing challenges in management
today. Readers of the volume will discover new models, innovative
theoretical approaches, comprehensive reviews, theoretical and
methodological critiques, and specific and insightful suggestions
for research on these different social and ethical issues facing
organizations. Perhaps more importantly, the practical suggestions
that come from the research provide a useful bridge between what we
know and what we can do to address these challenges, and thus
contribute, even in a small way, to workplaces that respect ethics
and individuals in all their diversity.
CONTENTS: Preface. Kees van den Bos, Stephen W. Gilliland, Dirk D.
Steiner, and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Part I: Developing Theories of
Fairness Motivation. Wanting is Believing: Understanding
Psychological Processes in Organizational Justice by Examining
Perceptions of Fairness. Steven L. Blader and D. Ramona Bobocel.
The Battle Between Self-Interest and Fairness: Evidence from
Ultimatum, Dictator, and Delta Games. Eric van Dijk and Ann
Tenbrunsel. Images of Justice: Development of Justice Integration
Theory. Stephen W. Gilliland and Layne Paddock. Interpersonal and
Informational Justice: Identifying the Differential Antecedents of
Interactional Justice Behaviors. Suzanne S. Masterson, Zinta S.
Byrne, and Hua Mao. Part II: Applying Theories to Managerial
Decisions. An Accessible Identity Approach to Understanding
Fairness in Organizational Settings. Linda J. Skitka and Jesus
Bravo. Self-Regulatory Identity Theory and Reactions Toward
Fairness Enhancing Organizational Policies. Karl Aquino, Americus
Reed II, Marcus M. Stewart, and Debra L. Shapiro. Why Managers
Don't Always do the Right Thing When Delivering Bad News: The Roles
of Empathy, Self-esteem, and Moral Development in Interactional
Fairness. David L. Patient and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Corporate
Champions: Coming to the Defense of Organizations. Carol T. Kulik.
Part III: Commentary. Some Observations and Critical Thoughts About
the Present State of Justice Theory and Research. Gerold Mikula.
Information on Contributing Authors.
|
Theoretical and Cultural Perspectives on Organizational Justice (Paperback)
Stephen W. Gilliland (University of Arizona, USA), Dirk D. Steiner (Universite de Nice Sophia-Antipolis, France), Daniel Skarlicki (University of British Columbia, Canada); Edited by Stephen W. Gilliland (University of Arizona, USA), Dirk D. Steiner (Universite de Nice Sophia-Antipolis, France), …
|
R1,570
Discovery Miles 15 700
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This volume includes essays on fairness heuristic thoery, the
problem of over and under emphasis of cultural differences and
fairness as deonance. It also offers a categorization approach to
fairness judgements, and asks if fairness is possible in disputes
among nationally-different employees.
|
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