Abstract

Previous studies have not adequately examined, in a single model, how gender and perception of organizational injustice are related with revenge-motivated behaviors, especially in male-dominated societies. This study investigated the extent to which gender and perception of organizational injustice predicted employees' tendencies to engage in workplace reactivity, which comprises organizational revenge, interpersonal revenge, interpersonal violence, and corruption in a sample of 703 (460 females; 243 males) employees. Results of the hierarchical multiple regression indicated that gender predicted employees' tendencies to engage in organizational revenge and interpersonal violence; with males showing higher tendencies than females. There were no gender differences in employees' tendencies to engage in corruption and interpersonal revenge. Employees' tendencies to engage in organizational revenge, interpersonal revenge, interpersonal violence, and corruption significantly increased with perception of organizational injustice. Females who felt unjustly treated exhibited as much organizational revenge, interpersonal revenge, interpersonal violence, and corrupt tendencies as males who felt unjustly treated. Implications for theory and research are discussed.

Details

Title
Gender Differences in the Effects of Perception of Organizational Injustice on Workplace Reactivity
Author
Ogungbamila, Bolanle; Udegbe, I Bola
Pages
150-167
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Feb 2014
Publisher
Europe's Journal of Psychology
e-ISSN
18410413
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1503846966
Copyright
Copyright Europe's Journal of Psychology Feb 2014