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Perceived threats of terrorism and job performance: The roles of job-related anxiety and religiousness
Institution:1. Goodman School of Business, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 3A1, Canada;2. Faculty of Management Sciences, Riphah International University, Lahore, Pakistan;3. School of Business and Economics, University of Management and Technology, Lahore, Pakistan
Abstract:This study investigates the relationship between employees' perceptions of the threat of terrorism and job performance, as well as a potential mediating effect of job-related anxiety and a moderating effect of religiousness on this relationship. Multisource, time-lagged data from employees and their supervisors in Pakistan reveal that an important reason that perceived threats of terrorism diminish job performance is the anxiety that employees experience at work. Employees' religiousness buffers the negative effect of perceived threats of terrorism on job-related anxiety though, such that the relationship is mitigated when their religiousness is high. Finally, the results indicate the presence of moderated mediation: the indirect effect of perceived threats of terrorism on job performance is not as strong at higher levels of religiousness. In external environments in which terrorism presents a credible threat, organizations can therefore consider the religiousness of their employees as a resource for countering their anxiety.
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