Attitudes toward employee and employer rights in the workplace |
| |
Authors: | Howard Garland Jane Giacobbe J. Lawrence French |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Business Administration, University of Delaware, Purnell Hall, 19716 Newark, Delaware;(2) Department of Management, The University of Texas at Arlington, 76019 Arlington, Texas;(3) MBA Program, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Northern Virginia Center, 2990 Telestar Court, 22042 Falls Church, Virginia |
| |
Abstract: | A large sample (N=692) of undergraduate business majors were surveyed in order to assess their attitudes toward 54 different employer activities that might impact on employee rights in the workplace. Demographic and lifestyle measures as well as one personality variable, authoritarianism, were also included in the survey. A factor analysis on attitudes toward employer activities revealed three distinct factors, which we labeled private, polydrug (i.e., polygraphs and drug tests), and normative activities. Mean levels of agreement with employer actions were highest for normative and lowest for private activities, with polydrug activities falling in between. All mean differences were highly significant. Authoritarianism proved to be the strongest predictor of attitudes toward both private and polydrug activities. |
| |
Keywords: | employee rights drug testing polygraph testing employee privacy |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|