When ethics are compromised: Understanding how employees react to corporate moral violations

被引:0
作者
Yue, Cen April [1 ]
Song, Baobao [2 ]
Tao, Weiting [3 ]
Kang, Minjeong [4 ]
机构
[1] Boston Univ, Boston, MA 02215 USA
[2] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Richmond, VA USA
[3] Univ Miami, Miami, FL USA
[4] Indiana Univ, Bloomington, IN USA
关键词
Moral violation; Ethical transgression; Employee communication; Corporate social responsibility; Attribution; Deonance theory; SOCIAL-RESPONSIBILITY; EMOTIONS; CONSUMER; DECISION; WHISTLE; ANGER; JUSTICE; SATISFACTION; FAILURES; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1016/j.pubrev.2024.102482
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This study investigated how employees react to corporate moral violations against external stakeholders, such as customers, the community, and the environment. Drawing from the deonance theory, we examined the relationships between employees' perceptions of corporate moral violations, their moral emotions (anger and sympathy), and their moral actions (external whistleblowing and compensating behavior) when they witness their company's ethical transgressions targeting external stakeholders. In addition, the study examined the moderating effects of employee-oriented corporate social responsibility and perceived moral violation intentionality on the impact of moral violation on employees' emotional and behavioral reactions. The proposed model was tested using an online survey panel of 417 full-time U.S. workers. The results mostly supported the hypotheses, indicating that perceived corporate moral violation interacted with employee-oriented CSR and moral violation intentionality to affect employees' anger and sympathy, which, in turn, influenced their moral actions.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 100 条
[1]   Characteristics and consequences of expectation violations in close relationships [J].
Afifi, WA ;
Metts, S .
JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS, 1998, 15 (03) :365-392
[2]   MTurk Research: Review and Recommendations [J].
Aguinis, Herman ;
Villamor, Isabel ;
Ramani, Ravi S. .
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, 2021, 47 (04) :823-837
[3]   Reconceptualising Whistleblowing in a Complex World [J].
Andrade, Julio A. .
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2015, 128 (02) :321-335
[4]   An Extended Model of Moral Outrage at Corporate Social Irresponsibility [J].
Antonetti, Paolo ;
Maklan, Stan .
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2016, 135 (03) :429-444
[5]   Getting even or moving on? Power, procedural justice, and types of offense as predictors of revenge, forgiveness, reconciliation, and avoidance in organizations [J].
Aquino, Karl ;
Tripp, Thomas M. ;
Bies, Robert J. .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, 2006, 91 (03) :653-668
[6]   Hypotheses in marketing science: Literature review and publication audit [J].
Armstrong, JS ;
Brodie, RJ ;
Parsons, AG .
MARKETING LETTERS, 2001, 12 (02) :171-187
[7]   Managerial attitude and support for social responsibility through the lens of legitimacy theory - a cross country comparison [J].
Bhattacharyya, Asit .
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY JOURNAL, 2014, 10 (04) :716-+
[8]   Ethics as a precursor to organization-public relationships: Building trust before and during the OPR model [J].
Bowen, Shannon A. ;
Hung-Baesecke, Chun-Ju Flora ;
Chen, Yi-Ru Regina .
COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES, 2016, 2
[9]   Exploring origins of ethical company/brand perceptions - A consumer perspective of corporate ethics [J].
Brunk, Katja H. .
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2010, 63 (03) :255-262
[10]  
Burgoon J. K., 1993, Journal of language and social psychology, V12, P30, DOI [DOI 10.1177/0261927X93121003, 10.1177/0261927X93121003, 10.1177/0261927x93121003]