Affective Commitment and Job Satisfaction Among Non-family Employees : Investigating the Roles of Justice Perceptions and Psychological Ownership
Journal
Journal of Family Business Strategy
ISSN
1877-8585
ISSN-Digital
1877-8593
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2011-06
Author(s)
Abstract
Due to numerous characteristics often attributed to family firms, they constitute a unique context for non-family employees' justice perceptions. These are linked to non-family employees' pro-organizational attitudes and behaviors, which are essential for family firms' success. Even though scholarly interest in non-family employees' justice perceptions has increased, more research is still need, also because the mechanism connecting justice perceptions and favorable outcomes is not fully understood yet. We address this gap by explicitly investigating non-family employees' justice perceptions and by introducing psychological ownership as a mediator in the relationships between justice perceptions (distributive and procedural) and common work attitudes (affective commitment and job satisfaction). Our analysis of a sample of 310 non-family employees from Germany and German-speaking Switzerland reveals that psychological ownership mediates the relationships between distributive justice and affective commitment as well as job satisfaction. This represents valuable contributions to family business research, organizational justice and psychological ownership literature, and to practice
Language
English
Keywords
Non-family employees
Organizational Justice
Psychological Ownership
Affective Commitment
Job Satisfaction
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher place
Amsterdam
Volume
2
Number
2
Start page
78
End page
89
Pages
12
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
81257
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JFBS41.pdf
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Format
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