Publication: Management commitment to the ecological environment and employees: implications for employee attitudes and citizenship behaviors
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Bauer, Talya N.
Taylor, Sully
Advisor
Publication Date
2015
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
In this article, we examine the implications of perceived management commitment to the ecological environment for employee attitudes and behaviors. Following deontic justice theory, which suggests that individuals are capable of feeling and expressing moral outrage when others are treated poorly, even if such treatment has no direct implications for themselves, we expected that employee attitudes and behaviors would be related to perceived organizational treatment of the environment. At the same time, we expected that these reactions would be moderated by how employees themselves were treated by the organization, in the form of perceived organizational support. In a study of employees and supervisors in a textile firm in Turkey, the results indicate that perceived organizational support moderated the effects of management commitment to the environment on organizational justice, organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behaviors targeting the environment.
Description
Source:
Human Relations
Publisher:
Sage Publications Ltd
Keywords:
Subject
Management, Social sciences