Individual and Organizational Antecedents of Misconduct in Organizations |
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Authors: | Nicole Andreoli Joel Lefkowitz |
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Affiliation: | (1) Baruch College, City University of New York, 46 Landfall Rd., East Hampton, NY, 11937, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | A heterogeneous survey sample of for-profit, non-profit and government employees revealed that organizational factors but not personal characteristics were significant antecedents of misconduct and job satisfaction. Formal organizational compliance practices and ethical climate were independent predictors of misconduct, and compliance practices also moderated the relationship between ethical climate and misconduct, as well as between pressure to compromise ethical standards and misconduct. Misconduct was not predicted by level of moral reasoning, age, sex, ethnicity, job status, or size and type of organization. Demographic variables predicted job satisfaction and organizational variables added significant incremental variance. Results suggest the importance of promoting a moral organization through the words and actions of senior managers and supervisors, independent of formal mechanisms such as codes of conduct. |
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Keywords: | antecedents of unethical behavior in organizations effectiveness of codes of conduct ethical climate in organizations ethical compliance practices in organizations individual and organizational determinants of unethical behavior job satisfaction and ethical behavior morality in organizations organizational misbehavior organizational misconduct |
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