2018
DOI: 10.1108/pr-03-2017-0078
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Inclusion and affective well-being: roles of justice perceptions

Abstract: Purpose -This paper examines the mediating roles of procedural justice and distributive justice in the organizational inclusion-affective wellbeing relationship.Design/methodology/approach -Data were collected from 253 Australian employees using an online survey. The study used confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modeling to analyze the data.Findings -Organizational inclusion was positively related to both distributive justice and procedural justice. The relationship between organizational inc… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Employees’ perceptions that their organization’s reward system is fair (i.e., distributive justice) also should reduce the likelihood that their experience of family-to-work conflict leads to lower change-oriented citizenship behavior. In the presence of distributive justice, employees experience their work situation as safer and their employer as more cognizant of their personal needs (Le et al, 2018), so they are more willing to undertake energy-consuming change-oriented citizenship behaviors, even if their ability to meet their formal performance targets may suffer as a result (Janssen, 2000). Perceptions of fair organizational rewards enhance the likelihood that employees maintain some level of extra-role change-oriented behaviors, even when they suffer from conflicting family and work demands, because they are confident that their employer will forgive them if their regular job performance suffers, due to their voluntary change efforts (B.…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Employees’ perceptions that their organization’s reward system is fair (i.e., distributive justice) also should reduce the likelihood that their experience of family-to-work conflict leads to lower change-oriented citizenship behavior. In the presence of distributive justice, employees experience their work situation as safer and their employer as more cognizant of their personal needs (Le et al, 2018), so they are more willing to undertake energy-consuming change-oriented citizenship behaviors, even if their ability to meet their formal performance targets may suffer as a result (Janssen, 2000). Perceptions of fair organizational rewards enhance the likelihood that employees maintain some level of extra-role change-oriented behaviors, even when they suffer from conflicting family and work demands, because they are confident that their employer will forgive them if their regular job performance suffers, due to their voluntary change efforts (B.…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The growing literature on workplace inclusion suggests that creating inclusive workplaces leads to affective well-being (Le et al, 2018), creativity and innovation (Brimhall & Mor Barak, 2018; Chung et al, 2020), job satisfaction (Brimhall et al, 2017; Mor Barak & Levin, 2002; Nishii, 2013), organizational commitment (Gonzalez & Denisi, 2009; Mor Barak et al, 2006; Nishii, 2013), enhanced individual performance (Chung et al, 2020; Dwertmann & Boehm, 2016), employee helping behaviour (Chung et al, 2020), lower turnover intentions (Brimhall et al, 2014, 2017; Gonzalez & Denisi, 2009; Hwang & Hopkins, 2012; Travis & Mor Barak, 2010) and reduced conflict (Nishii, 2013). Based on prior research, I hypothesize that: Hypothesis 1: Workplace inclusion will be positively related to (a) job satisfaction and (b) lower turnover intentions. …”
Section: Model Overview and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, fair treatment signals to group members that they are valued and included by the group (De Cremer & Tyler, 2005; Ellemers et al, 2004; Leary et al, 2003). Through survey data collected from Australian employees, Le et al (2018) determined that organizational inclusion was positively related to perceptions of justice (i.e., distributive and procedural justice), and that perceptions of justice mediated the relationship between organizational inclusion and well-being. Based on a review of the literature, I propose that when employees are treated fairly, they are more likely to feel included.…”
Section: Organizational Justice and Inclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A combination of satisfaction and happiness is referred to as subjective well-being (Steel et al, 2018). Subjective well-being is broader than psychological well-being, and refers to employees' attitudes about their work context, such as job satisfaction (Diener, 2000), affective well-being, (which determined by emotion, Le et al, 2018a), as it measures individuals' satisfaction with their health in general and other aspects of life. The construct of subjective well-being asks people to self-report how satisfied they are with eight life domains: living standards, health, work achievements, personal relationships, safety, community belongingness, future security, and religion/spirituality (Cummins et al, 2002;Lau et al, 2005).…”
Section: Leader-member Exchange (Lmx) and Subjective Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%