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When Birds of a Feather Flock Together: The Role of Core-Self Evaluations and Moral Intensity in the Relationship Between Network Unethicality and Unethical Choice
Authors:C Justice Tillman  Anthony C Hood  Ericka R Lawrence  K Michele Kacmar
Institution:1. Department of Management, Baruch College, CUNYlawrencee@ecu.edu;3. Management, Information Systems and Quantitative Methods, University of Alabama at Birmingham;4. Department of Management, East Carolina University;5. Department of Management, Texas State University
Abstract:Leveraging perspectives from social cognitive theory, the attention-based view, and social networks literatures, we tested the relationship between unethical choice and network unethicality, which we define as respondents’ perceptions of their peer advisors’ unethical choices. Although social cognitive theory predicts that perceptions of peer advisor unethical choice are positively associated with unethical choice, we theorize that the nature of this relationship depends on the personality of the actor (core self-evaluation) and the situation (moral intensity). Results from a lagged study suggest that individual and situational variables may act as key buffers to the adverse impact of unethical social influence on ethical choice. Strengths, limitations, and directions for future research are discussed.
Keywords:networks  ethics  lagged design  decision making  core self-evaluation
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