Author:
Ohana Marc,Stinglhamber Florence,Caesens Gaëtane
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to examine the effect of coworkers’ interpersonal justice (defined as the extent to which one is treated by coworkers with dignity, courtesy and respect) on team citizenship behaviors. More precisely, the authors first test the mediating role played by both team-member exchange and team identification in this relationship. Further, they examine the moderating role of extraversion in these two mediating mechanisms.
Design/methodology/approach
Based on 134 subordinate–supervisor dyads, the authors conducted moderated multiple mediation analysis.
Findings
The results of this study showed that, for highly extraverted employees, coworkers’ interpersonal justice positively influences team citizenship behaviors because of an exchange relationship of better quality among the team members. In contrast, for employees with low or medium levels of extraversion, the positive effect of coworkers’ interpersonal justice on team citizenship behaviors is explained by their higher identification with the team.
Practical implications
This paper holds important implications for management practice in teamwork environment. Given coworkers' interpersonal justice role in determining team citizenship behaviors, the findings of this study highlight the importance of establishing a work culture where each employee treats others fairly.
Originality/value
Overall, these findings indicate that, depending on the level of employees’ extraversion, mechanisms grounded in the social exchange and the social identity perspectives act as complementary mechanisms in the team-focused justice–citizenship behaviors relationship.
Subject
Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Business and International Management
Reference54 articles.
1. Justice climate and workgroup outcomes: the role of coworker fair behavior and workgroup structure;Journal of Business Ethics,2021
2. Social identity theory and the organization;The Academy of Management Review,1989
3. A longitudinal study of the moderating role of extraversion: leader-member exchange, performance, and turnover during new executive development;Journal of Applied Psychology,2006
4. Testing and extending the group engagement model: linkages between social identity, procedural justice, economic outcomes, and extrarole behavior;Journal of Applied Psychology,2009
5. Who is this ‘We’? Levels of collective identity and self representations;Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,1996