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Retaliation in the Workplace: The Roles of Distributive, Procedural and Interactional Justice

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Retaliation in the Workplace: The Roles of Distributive, Procedural and Interactional Justice
Author(s)Skarlicki, D. P.; Folger, R.
AbstractThe literature on organizational justice has identified 3 key components of this process: distributive, procedural, and interactional justice. On the basis of fairness heuristic theory, we reasoned that employees may use perceptions of these 3 components as a basis for drawing inferences about the fairness of the organization as a whole (i.e., their perceptions of systemic justice). A field study was conducted on a sample of 232 employees working in various organizations. Results show that employees’ perceptions of procedural justice and interactional justice in their organizations positively predicted perceptions of systemic justice (i.e., that the organization was fair overall). Perceptions of distributive justice, however, did not predict perceptions of systemic justice. Practical implications of these findings are discussed.
IssueNo3
Pages434-443
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of Retailing
VolumeNo82
PubDate 1997
ISBN_ISSN0022-4359

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