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Organizational justice and mental health: A multi‐level test of justice interactions
Authors:Ronald Fischer  Amina Abubakar  Josephine Nyaboke Arasa
Institution:1. Centre for Applied Cross‐Cultural Research, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand;2. Department of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands;3. Department of Child and Adolescent Studies, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands;4. Department of Psychology, United States International University (USIU), Nairobi, Kenya
Abstract:We examine main and interaction effects of organizational justice at the individual and the organizational levels on general health in a Kenyan sample. We theoretically differentiate between two different interaction patterns of justice effects: buffering mechanisms based on trust versus intensifying explanations of justice interactions that involve psychological contract violations. Using a two‐level hierarchical linear model with responses from 427 employees in 29 organizations, only interpersonal justice at level 1 demonstrated a significant main effect. Interactions between distributive and interpersonal justice at both the individual and the collective levels were found. The intensifying hypothesis was supported: the relationship between distributive justice and mental health problems was strongest when interpersonal justice was high. This contrasts with buffering patterns described in Western samples. We argue that justice interaction patterns shift depending on the economic conditions and sociocultural characteristics of employees studied.
Keywords:Organizational justice  Mental health  Buffering hypothesis  Intensifying hypothesis  Justice climate  Africa
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