管理者为何首先会公平行事?对“冷”与“热”动机及自由裁量权的日常调查

Why Do Managers Act Fairly in the First Place? A Daily Investigation of “Hot” and “Cold” Motives and Discretion

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2014
被引 124
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

通过90名管理者三周的每日调查,发现管理者遵守公平规则既受“冷”认知动机(如确保合规、维护身份)也受“热”情感动机(如积极情绪)驱动,且不同动机在管理者感知自由裁量权高低时作用不同。

Abstract

Although considerable research has focused on employee reactions to organizational justice, far less research has examined why managers adhere to rules of justice in the first place. Taking a proactive approach to organizational justice, we address this void by examining managerial motives for adhering to distributive, procedural, informational, and interpersonal rules of justice on a day-to-day basis. Results of an experience-sampling study of 90 managers who completed daily surveys over a three-week period revealed that both “cold” cognitive (i.e., effecting compliance, identity maintenance, and establishing fairness) and “hot” affective (i.e., high positive affect and low negative affect) motives were associated with managerial adherence to justice rules. Moreover, “cold” motives were more strongly associated with justice rule adherence for justice dimensions over which managers perceived less discretion, while “hot” motives were more strongly associated with justice rule adherence for justice dimensions over which managers perceived greater discretion. We discuss the implications of our findings for both theory and practice.

组织公平管理者动机日常经验取样自由裁量权