How Employees See Their Roles: The Effect of Interactional Justice and Gender

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 206KB)  PP. 281-286  
DOI: 10.4236/jssm.2010.32035    7,889 Downloads   13,654 Views  Citations

Affiliation(s)

.

ABSTRACT

This study examines whether the perceived boundary between in-role and extra-role behaviors varies depending on workplace conditions, emphasizing how interactional justice influences an employee’s role definitions. We collect data through a questionnaire survey and adopt Tobit regressions for hypothesis testing. The study results indicate that perceived interactional justice enlarges the breadth of an employee’s role definitions. In addition, the positive impact of interactional justice on an employee’s role definition is strong when a supervisor-subordinate dyad comprises different genders.

Share and Cite:

N. Ando and S. Matsuda, "How Employees See Their Roles: The Effect of Interactional Justice and Gender," Journal of Service Science and Management, Vol. 3 No. 2, 2010, pp. 281-286. doi: 10.4236/jssm.2010.32035.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.