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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/2665
Title: THE EFFECTS OF PROCEDURAL & DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE, JOB SATISFACTION & ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT UPON ORGANIZATIONAL CITIZENSHIP BEHAVIOR (OCB) IN GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS
Authors: Batool, Saima
Keywords: Applied Sciences
Issue Date: 2011
Publisher: Qurtuba University of Science and Information Technology
Abstract: Organizational Citizenship Behavior or "extra-role behavior" has received a great deal of attention from organizational behavior researchers in the last two decades. Unfortunately, because inquisitions into this topic are still at an early stage, relatively little is yet known about the antecedents of, or key influences on, OCB. In present investigation I looked at prognostic power of these four variables as antecedents of OCB (distributive justice, procedural justice, organizational commitment, and job satisfaction). For that a hierarchical regression analysis was carried out using OCB as the dependent variable. Research also intended to unmask that whether there is any relation between methods of performance monitoring and OCB and what type of effects performance monitoring has on dimensions of OCB which employee exhibit. Because my hypotheses examine the relationships among the methods of monitoring, dimensions of justice, and citizenship behaviors, I first analyzed the data using a nested-models analysis and then looked at the significance of the individual paths. In conclusion, overall, the results provide limited encouragement for the familiar compensatory model of relationships among the leader monitoring behaviours, perceptions of justice, and OCB. Informal discussions formal meetings were found to have a direct and positive relationship with altruism, courtesy and conscientiousness, conflicting with the overall negative relationship hypothesized between monitoring and OCB. Similarly, distributive justice was found to have a significant, negative relationship with the four out of five OCB dimensions, instead of the hypothesized positive relationships. Results does not approved that the exceptional variance in organizational citizenship behavior will be expounded via Organizational commitment Comparisons of findings show that satisfaction in job confirms solid association to Organizational Citizenship Behavior, tracked by organizational commitment, Interactional justice, and distributive justice.
URI: http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/2665
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