JUSTICE IN TEAMS: ANTECEDENTS AND CONSEQUENCES OF PROCEDURAL JUSTICE CLIMATE
University of Florida · The Ohio State University
Abstract
This study examined antecedents and consequences of procedural justice climate (Mossholder, Bennett, & Martin, 1998; Naumann & Bennett, 2000) in a sample of manufacturing teams. The results showed that climate level (i.e., the average procedural justice perception within the team) was significantly related to both team performance and team absenteeism. Moreover, the effects of climate level were moderated by climate strength, such that the relationships were more beneficial in stronger climates. In addition, team size and team collectivism were significant antecedents of climate level, and team size and team demographic diversity predicted climate strength.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 70
Authors
3- JAJason A. ColquittCorresponding
University of Florida
- RARaymond A. Noe
The Ohio State University
- CLCHRISTINE L. JACKSON
University of Florida
Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Procedural justice
- Collectivism
- Economic Justice
- Absenteeism
- Social psychology
- Perception
- Organizational justice
- Climate action