留下还是离开:组织裁员后自愿离职的幸存者

To stay or to go: voluntary survivor turnover following an organizational downsizing

JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR · 2002
被引 305
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

研究了裁员后幸存员工对公平感、管理层可信度和赋权感的反应如何影响他们对组织的依附度,进而影响一年内的自愿离职率。

Abstract

Abstract This paper examines the relationship between survivor reactions to a downsizing and retention subsequent to a downsizing. We hypothesize that survivors who experience the downsizing as distributively, procedurally, and interactionally just and who see top management as trustworthy will feel more attached to the organization because each reduces the threat inherent in downsizing. In addition, we hypothesize that survivors who feel empowered will also feel more attached to the organization because they feel better able to cope with the downsizing. We further hypothesize that those survivors who feel more attached to the organization following the downsizing will be more likely to remain with the organization in the coming year. The theoretical model is tested on a sample of aerospace employees who survived an organizational downsizing. The trustworthiness of management, distributive justice, procedural justice, and three dimensions of empowerment are found to facilitate more organizational attachment. Higher levels of attachment are found, in turn, to facilitate less voluntary turnover in the year following the downsizing. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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