Informational Justice and Remote Working: All is Not Fair for Work at Home

被引:0
|
作者
Emily Lane
Matthew J. Aplin-Houtz
机构
[1] University of Missouri Saint Louis,College of Business Administration
[2] Brooklyn College,Department of Psychology
来源
Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal | 2023年 / 35卷
关键词
Remote working; Organizational justice; Informational justice; Fairness perceptions;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Given the increase in remote working due to the social distancing requirements as part of the response to the Covid-19 Pandemic, the variable of work-from-home has become more salient in the business community. The existing literature squarely places remote working as an antecedent to employee perceptions of Organizational Justice throughout many industries. The same literature presents work from home in a positive frame of reference in a pre-pandemic world. However, in the Covid-19 environment, many perceptions have changed regarding employment. Likely overall perceptions regarding work from home have also shifted because more people engage in the activity. We argue that perceptions of work from home through the frame of reference found in the literature of Organizational Justice have shifted to be more negative. To study this phenomenon, we gathered social media data in comments from a work discussion forum on the Reddit website. We coded the data with an a priori codeset and assigned dummy variables for analysis. The dataset was analyzed via a five-way Factorial ANOVA examining the influences of the four independent variables of Organizational Justice (Distributive, Procedural, Interpersonal, and Informational Justice) and the temporal occurrence of Covid-19 on the sentimental polarity of comments surrounding the topic of work from home. Our findings indicated that Informational Justice significantly contributes to more negative sentiment regarding work-from-home. Additionally, when Distributive, Interpersonal, and Informational Justice and Distributive and Informational Justice interact, sentimental polarity grows more negative for work from home. Discussion of results, implications for practice, and limitations presented.
引用
收藏
页码:541 / 564
页数:23
相关论文
共 39 条
  • [1] Informational Justice and Remote Working: All is Not Fair for Work at Home
    Lane, Emily
    Aplin-Houtz, Matthew J.
    EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND RIGHTS JOURNAL, 2023, 35 (04) : 541 - 564
  • [2] Exploring Nexus among Interpersonal Justice, Informational Justice and Employee Commitment: How Immoral Work Behaviour Moderates?
    Mabkhot, Hashed
    Piaralal, Shishi Kumar
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES, 2023, 18 (02): : 433 - 452
  • [3] Remote Working and Work Effectiveness: A Leader Perspective
    Kowalski, Grzegorz
    Slebarska, Katarzyna
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (22)
  • [4] THE REMOTE WORK NIGHTMARE: REMOTE SUPERVISION MECHANISMS USED BY HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGERS IN REMOTE WORKING
    Yilmaz, Canan
    JOURNAL OF MEHMET AKIF ERSOY UNIVERSITY ECONOMICS AND ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCES FACULTY, 2023, 10 (03): : 1956 - 1975
  • [5] Interactional justice at work is related to sickness absence: a study using repeated measures in the Swedish working population
    Constanze Leineweber
    Claudia Bernhard-Oettel
    Paraskevi Peristera
    Constanze Eib
    Anna Nyberg
    Hugo Westerlund
    BMC Public Health, 17
  • [6] Interactional justice at work is related to sickness absence: a study using repeated measures in the Swedish working population
    Leineweber, Constanze
    Bernhard-Oettel, Claudia
    Peristera, Paraskevi
    Eib, Constanze
    Nyberg, Anna
    Westerlund, Hugo
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2017, 17 : 912
  • [7] Hardly working or working hard? The moderating effect of work ethic on the interpersonal justice to time banditry relationship
    Halleck, Jamey R.
    Knotts, Kevin G.
    Henley, Amy B.
    Campbell, Stacy M.
    EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND RIGHTS JOURNAL, 2025,
  • [8] What Attracts Employees to Work on Site in Times of Increased Remote Working?
    Smite, Darja
    Klotins, Eriks
    Moe, Nils Brede
    IEEE SOFTWARE, 2025, 42 (01) : 100 - 109
  • [9] IT'S NOT FAIR ... OR IS IT? THE ROLE OF JUSTICE AND LEADERSHIP IN EXPLAINING WORK STRESSOR-JOB PERFORMANCE RELATIONSHIPS
    Zhang, Yiwen
    Lepine, Jeffery A.
    Buckman, Brooke R.
    Wei, Feng
    ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2014, 57 (03) : 675 - 697
  • [10] When Fair Procedures Don't Work: a Self-Threat Model of Procedural Justice
    Lilly, Juliana D.
    Wipawayangkool, Kamphol
    CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 37 (03) : 680 - 691