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When employees behave badly: The roles of contract importance and workplace familism in predicting negative reactions to psychological contract breach

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Authors

Restubog, Simon
Zagenczyk, Thomas J.
Bordia, Prashant
Tang, Robert L.

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Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Abstract

In this paper, we examine the influence of contract importance, feelings of violation, and workplace familism on the relationship between psychological contract breach and organizational deviance. Results from a study of 168 supervisor-employee dyads in a pharmaceutical organization suggest that (a) feelings of violation mediated the relationship between perceived breach and supervisor-rated organizational deviance; (b) relational and transactional contract importance influenced the relationship between breach and feelings of violation such that the relationship was stronger under conditions of high relational and transactional importance; and (c) high levels of workplace familism mitigated the effects of feelings of violation on supervisor-rated organizational deviance.

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Journal of Applied Social Psychology

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Restricted until

2037-12-31
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