Health Consequences of Organizational Injustice: Tests of Main and Interactive Effects |
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Authors: | Bennett J. Tepper |
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Affiliation: | Department of Management, Belk College of Business Administration, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte |
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Abstract: | I report the results of two studies that explored relationships between employees' justice perceptions and their psychological well-being. In both studies, the main and interactive effects of distributive justice and procedural justice accounted for significant, unique variance in employees' psychological distress. Consistent with predictions derived from a framework that integrates stress and coping theory with justice theory, relationships between procedural justice and psychological distress were stronger when distributive justice was lower. I discuss theoretical implications for the organizational justice literature and identify the studies' limitations and practical implications. |
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