Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study

The purpose of this study is to look at employee voice and in particular, how dissent is expressed in an organisation in Malaysia. The study draws upon current theories on employee voice, dissent and whistle-blowing to report on the findings of a preliminary study that used the qualitative approach...

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Main Authors: Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran, Abd. Razak, Siti Suraya, Lee, Su Yee
Format: Article
Published: LSP International Journal 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/82285/
https://doi.org/10.11113/lspi.v5n1.62
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
id my.utm.82285
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spelling my.utm.822852019-11-20T06:35:30Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/82285/ Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran Abd. Razak, Siti Suraya Lee, Su Yee LB Theory and practice of education The purpose of this study is to look at employee voice and in particular, how dissent is expressed in an organisation in Malaysia. The study draws upon current theories on employee voice, dissent and whistle-blowing to report on the findings of a preliminary study that used the qualitative approach by analysing semi-structured interviews. Six members of staff took part in the study. Fundamental information contained in the interview questions included communication style, management style and the organisational culture that would encourage employee voice and freedom of speech within the organisation. The preliminary findings show that the staffs are restrictive in expressing dissent to the top management. This highlights the lack of a culture for employees to express dissatisfaction at work to higher authorities due to limited openness of the top management, which results in a low level of articulated dissent. Possible reasons include the unavailability of an employee voice mechanism within the organisation including the legal support and protection where proper channels for employees to express dissent are not in practice. This study highlights the importance of employee voice within an organisation and that proper mechanisms should be in place as a sign of respect and appreciation of employee voice at the workplace. LSP International Journal 2018 Article PeerReviewed Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran and Abd. Razak, Siti Suraya and Lee, Su Yee (2018) Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study. LSP International Journal, 5 (1). pp. 23-47. ISSN 2289-3199 https://doi.org/10.11113/lspi.v5n1.62
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic LB Theory and practice of education
spellingShingle LB Theory and practice of education
Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran
Abd. Razak, Siti Suraya
Lee, Su Yee
Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study
description The purpose of this study is to look at employee voice and in particular, how dissent is expressed in an organisation in Malaysia. The study draws upon current theories on employee voice, dissent and whistle-blowing to report on the findings of a preliminary study that used the qualitative approach by analysing semi-structured interviews. Six members of staff took part in the study. Fundamental information contained in the interview questions included communication style, management style and the organisational culture that would encourage employee voice and freedom of speech within the organisation. The preliminary findings show that the staffs are restrictive in expressing dissent to the top management. This highlights the lack of a culture for employees to express dissatisfaction at work to higher authorities due to limited openness of the top management, which results in a low level of articulated dissent. Possible reasons include the unavailability of an employee voice mechanism within the organisation including the legal support and protection where proper channels for employees to express dissent are not in practice. This study highlights the importance of employee voice within an organisation and that proper mechanisms should be in place as a sign of respect and appreciation of employee voice at the workplace.
format Article
author Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran
Abd. Razak, Siti Suraya
Lee, Su Yee
author_facet Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran
Abd. Razak, Siti Suraya
Lee, Su Yee
author_sort Sandaran @ Chandran, Shanti Chandran
title Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study
title_short Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study
title_full Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study
title_fullStr Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study
title_full_unstemmed Employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in Malaysia: a case study
title_sort employee voice and the communication of dissent in an organisational setting in malaysia: a case study
publisher LSP International Journal
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/82285/
https://doi.org/10.11113/lspi.v5n1.62
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