Organisational justice and strain‐based conflict among Nigerian prison officers

Author:

Jenkins Morris1,Lambert Eric G.2,Elechi O. Oko3,Hall Daniel4,Otu Smart5,Lanterman Jennifer L.6,Barrington Claire7

Affiliation:

1. Morris Jenkins is Associate Professor, Justice, Law, and Public Safety Department Lewis University Illinois USA

2. Eric G. Lambert is Professor, School of Public and Environmental Affairs Indiana University Northwest Indiana USA

3. O. Oko Elechi is Professor, Department of Criminal Justice Mississippi Valley State University Mississippi USA

4. Daniel Hall is Professor, Department of Justice and Community Studies Miami University Hamilton Ohio USA

5. Smart Otu is Senior Lecturer, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Federal University Nigeria

6. Jennifer L. Lanterman is Associate Professor, Department of Criminal Justice University of Nevada Nevada USA

7. Claire Barrington is undergraduate student, English Studies and Criminal Justice Miami University Hamilton Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractMost employees, including prison employees, want their employers to treat them fairly. Distributive justice (perceived fairness of outcomes) and procedural justice (perceived fairness of processes and procedures) are important dimensions of organisational justice. Limited research among correctional staff in the US suggests that views of distributive and procedural justice spill over and result in a strain‐based form of work‐family conflict. Strain‐based conflict occurs when work problems follow a person home and create conflict at home. Based on multivariate regression analysis of survey data from 120 Nigerian prison staff, distributive justice had significant negative effects on the strain‐based form of work‐family conflict. Contrary to findings among US staff, procedural justice did not have a similar significant association. The connection between views of organisational justice and strain‐based work‐family conflict appears to vary by nation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Law

Reference80 articles.

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