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Employer Treatment of Employees During a Community Crisis: The Role of Procedural and Distributive Justice
Authors:Steve Harvey  Victor Y Haines III
Institution:(1) Williams School of Business and Economics, Bishop’s University, Lennoxville, Quebec, Canada;(2) School of Industrial Relations, University of Montreal, Canada
Abstract:This study applies organizational justice principles to human resource decisions made during a crisis situation. Three-hundred and sixty-six working individuals of ice storm affected households responded to a telephone survey that included measures of interactional, procedural and distributive justice, organizational commitment and job satisfaction. Confirmatory Factor Analysis suggested collapsing the interactional and procedural justice measures into one measure of procedural treatment. Overall, there was considerable support for the relevance of procedural justice and its interaction with distributive justice in predicting the work attitudes of employee following a disaster. Multiple regression analyses revealed that perceptions of procedural justice most strongly predicted job satisfaction and organizational commitment. Consistent with existing theory, an interaction between distributive and procedural was found to predict job satisfaction. The predicted interaction was not detected for organizational commitment.We would like to acknowledge the capable research assistance of Paula Warnholtz and the financial assistance from the Senate Research Committee at Bishop’s University.
Keywords:organizational justice  natural disasters  work attitudes
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