Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry

Although turnover intention has been studied widely in Western countries, such studies are still small in number in Asia countries like Thailand. The aims of this quantitative research were: to empirically determine the significant predictors of organizational justice (distributive justice and proce...

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Main Author: Phayoonpun, Thammayantee
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://etd.uum.edu.my/5325/
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Institution: Universiti Utara Malaysia
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spelling my.uum.etd.53252021-03-18T08:42:55Z http://etd.uum.edu.my/5325/ Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry Phayoonpun, Thammayantee HF5549-5549.5 Personnel Management. Employment Although turnover intention has been studied widely in Western countries, such studies are still small in number in Asia countries like Thailand. The aims of this quantitative research were: to empirically determine the significant predictors of organizational justice (distributive justice and procedural justice) and role stressors (role ambiguity, role conflict, work-overload and work-family conflict); to examine the mediating effect of job satisfaction on the relationship between predictors and turnover intention, and to investigate the applicability of the Social Exchange Theory (SET) in explaining turnover intention in Thailand. A survey was conducted among 342 IT professionals in 21 ICT organizations located in Thailand‟s ICT industry‟s four sub-sector (Computer Hardware, Computer Software, Technology Information (IT) Services and Communication). Data were analyzed using the Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). Out of the 13 hypotheses regarding turnover intention, seven had significant direct effects (distributive justice, procedural justice, role ambiguity, role conflict, work-overload to job satisfaction; job satisfaction to turnover intention). The finding of this study revealed that there is a positive significant relationship between distributive justice and procedural justice with job satisfaction. This study also revealed that there is a negative significant relationship between role ambiguity, role conflict, work-overload and work-family conflict with job satisfaction. This study found a statistically negative significant relationship between job satisfaction and turnover intention. The study also found that job satisfaction was a full mediator of the relationship between distributive justice, procedural justice, role conflict and work-family conflict with turnover intention. Finally, job satisfaction partially mediated the relationship of role ambiguity and work-family conflict with turnover intention. The present study also highlighted the implications of the study, future research work as well as its limitations. 2015 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en /5325/1/s92860.pdf text en /5325/2/s92860_abstract.pdf Phayoonpun, Thammayantee (2015) Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry. DBA thesis, Universiti Utara Malaysia.
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Electronic Theses
url_provider http://etd.uum.edu.my/
language English
English
topic HF5549-5549.5 Personnel Management. Employment
spellingShingle HF5549-5549.5 Personnel Management. Employment
Phayoonpun, Thammayantee
Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry
description Although turnover intention has been studied widely in Western countries, such studies are still small in number in Asia countries like Thailand. The aims of this quantitative research were: to empirically determine the significant predictors of organizational justice (distributive justice and procedural justice) and role stressors (role ambiguity, role conflict, work-overload and work-family conflict); to examine the mediating effect of job satisfaction on the relationship between predictors and turnover intention, and to investigate the applicability of the Social Exchange Theory (SET) in explaining turnover intention in Thailand. A survey was conducted among 342 IT professionals in 21 ICT organizations located in Thailand‟s ICT industry‟s four sub-sector (Computer Hardware, Computer Software, Technology Information (IT) Services and Communication). Data were analyzed using the Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). Out of the 13 hypotheses regarding turnover intention, seven had significant direct effects (distributive justice, procedural justice, role ambiguity, role conflict, work-overload to job satisfaction; job satisfaction to turnover intention). The finding of this study revealed that there is a positive significant relationship between distributive justice and procedural justice with job satisfaction. This study also revealed that there is a negative significant relationship between role ambiguity, role conflict, work-overload and work-family conflict with job satisfaction. This study found a statistically negative significant relationship between job satisfaction and turnover intention. The study also found that job satisfaction was a full mediator of the relationship between distributive justice, procedural justice, role conflict and work-family conflict with turnover intention. Finally, job satisfaction partially mediated the relationship of role ambiguity and work-family conflict with turnover intention. The present study also highlighted the implications of the study, future research work as well as its limitations.
format Thesis
author Phayoonpun, Thammayantee
author_facet Phayoonpun, Thammayantee
author_sort Phayoonpun, Thammayantee
title Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry
title_short Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry
title_full Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry
title_fullStr Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry
title_full_unstemmed Organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among IT professions in Thailand's ICT industry
title_sort organizational justice, role stressors job satisfaction and turnover intention among it professions in thailand's ict industry
publishDate 2015
url http://etd.uum.edu.my/5325/
_version_ 1695533669967462400