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Experts in the fields of organizational politics and justice explore the nuances of organizational life. They analyze how these concepts work alone and in concert with each other to influence employees' perceptions of and reactions to their organizations. One argument concludes that managers use politics to compensate for the inadequacies in the current approach to human resources management, while another finds that support and justice benefit the employer, not the employee. Practitioners and scholars in human resources, organizational behavior, psychology, and business law will find new and controversial interpretations of human behavior in the workplace.
Table des matières
Illustrations
The Social Setting of Work Organizations: Politics, Justice, and Support by Russell Cropanzano, K. Michele Kacmar, and Dennis P. Bozeman
Organizational PoliticsPolitical Fairness and Fair Politics: The Conceptual Integration of Divergent Constructs by Gerald R. Ferris, Dwight D. Frink, Terry A. Beehr, and David C. Gilmore
Influences of Supervisor Behaviors on the Levels and Effects of Workplace Politics by L. Alan Witt
How Politics Can Destructure Human Resources Management in the Interest of Empowerment, Support, and Justice by Robert L. Dipboye
Organizational JusticeJustice and Authority Relations in Organizations by E. Allan Lind
Procedural Justice and Influence Tactics: Fairness, Frequency, and Effectiveness by Maureen L. Ambrose and Lynn K. Harland
The Use and Abuse of Power: Justice as Social Control by Robert J. Bies and Thomas M. Tripp
Organizational SupportPerceived Organizational Support and Organizational Justice by Lynn McFarlane Shore and Ted H. Shore
Total Quality Teams: How Organizational Politics and Support Impact the Effectiveness of Quality Improvement Teams by John C. Howes, Maryalice Citera, and Russell S. Cropanzano
Procedural Justice and Perceived Organizational Support: Hypothesized Effects on Job Performance by Peter M. Fasolo
References
Index
About the Contributors
A propos de l'auteur
RUSSELL S. CROPANZANO is currently an Associate Professor of Psychology at Colorado State University. His major research interests include the application of social justice principles to human resource interventions.
K. MICHELE KACMAR is an Associate Professor at Florida State University, Tallahassee. Her research interests are in organizational entry, selection procedures of organizations, and job search and decision-making processes of applicants.