Antecedents to Unethical Corporate Conduct: Characteristics of the Complicit Follower
通过两项准实验,研究了冲动性、威权主义和主动性三种个体特征如何影响员工参与不道德共谋的意图和识别伦理困境的能力,发现高冲动性和低威权主义会增强共谋意图并降低伦理识别能力。
ABSTRACT Appropriately, researchers are devoting increased attention to the behavioral antecedents to unethical conduct in business. Prior management research, however, has focused primarily on destructive leaders while little research has focused on complicit followers, especially outside of the management literature. Thus, this paper examines three individual characteristics of followers—impulsivity, authoritarianism, and proactivity—in an accounting context. Two quasi-experiments are conducted to determine whether each characteristic influences an individual's intention for unethical complicity (Study 1) and ability to identify ethical dilemmas (Study 2). Results reveal that both high impulsivity and low authoritarianism lead to greater intention for unethical complicity and reduced ability to identify ethical dilemmas. Consistent with our prediction, high impulsivity and low authoritarianism interactively lead to the greatest intention for unethical complicity and lowest ability to identify ethical dilemmas. Additionally, in Study 1, high proactivity and high authoritarianism interactively lead to the greatest intention to resist supervisors' requests for compliant misconduct. Important contributions and implications for both theory and practice are also discussed.