The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group
Business ethics research has long examined the dichotomy between remaining silent or reporting ethical misconduct to a third party. Little is known, however, about ethical conversations within a work group after observing misconduct. Specifically, we do not know how many members of their work group...
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2024
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-83032024-12-19T08:51:28Z The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group OC, Burak KOUCHAKI, Maryam Business ethics research has long examined the dichotomy between remaining silent or reporting ethical misconduct to a third party. Little is known, however, about ethical conversations within a work group after observing misconduct. Specifically, we do not know how many members of their work group individuals choose to communicate with. These conversations could have important implications for creating an ethical workplace. We propose that psychological standing is an important driver of individuals' decisions not to remain silent and to instead raise moral concerns with a greater number of others in their work group. In addition, integrating existing work on structural power, psychological standing, and the bystander effect, we develop a moderated mediation model with both structural power position and work group size as contextual drivers of psychological standing. Our model is supported across four studies using different designs and methodological approaches. Our results contribute to the understanding of when and why individuals raise moral concerns, and they provide insights into how an ethical context is created in organizations. 2024-04-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7304 info:doi/10.1007/s10551-023-05431-y https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/8303/viewcontent/s10551_023_05431_pvoa_cc_by.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Number of targets Psychological standing Power Bystander effect Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Organizational Behavior and Theory |
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Number of targets Psychological standing Power Bystander effect Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Organizational Behavior and Theory |
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Number of targets Psychological standing Power Bystander effect Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Organizational Behavior and Theory OC, Burak KOUCHAKI, Maryam The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
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Business ethics research has long examined the dichotomy between remaining silent or reporting ethical misconduct to a third party. Little is known, however, about ethical conversations within a work group after observing misconduct. Specifically, we do not know how many members of their work group individuals choose to communicate with. These conversations could have important implications for creating an ethical workplace. We propose that psychological standing is an important driver of individuals' decisions not to remain silent and to instead raise moral concerns with a greater number of others in their work group. In addition, integrating existing work on structural power, psychological standing, and the bystander effect, we develop a moderated mediation model with both structural power position and work group size as contextual drivers of psychological standing. Our model is supported across four studies using different designs and methodological approaches. Our results contribute to the understanding of when and why individuals raise moral concerns, and they provide insights into how an ethical context is created in organizations. |
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OC, Burak KOUCHAKI, Maryam |
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OC, Burak KOUCHAKI, Maryam |
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OC, Burak |
title |
The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
title_short |
The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
title_full |
The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
title_fullStr |
The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
title_full_unstemmed |
The more the merrier: How psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
title_sort |
more the merrier: how psychological standing and work group size explain managers' willingness to communicate about unethical conduct in their work group |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2024 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7304 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/8303/viewcontent/s10551_023_05431_pvoa_cc_by.pdf |
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