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Procedural Justice and the Organization of Labor

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Title: Procedural Justice and the Organization of Labor


1
Procedural Justice and the Organization of Labor
  • Tom R. Tyler
  • Department of Psychology
  • New York University

Presented at the Conference on Social and
Psychological Foundations of Economic Life.
European Science Days 2001. July 2-5, 2001 -
Steyr, Austria
2
The psychology of motivation
  • One important issue underlying the organization
    of labor is the psychology of employee motivation
    --
  • What motivates employees to do their jobs well?
  • The structures of organizations and the rules
    governing the workplace are most effective when
    they are based on an accurate model of what
    motivates employees

3
Workplace design
  • The underlying assumption is that the structure
    of the workplace influences employee motivation
  • This leads to a strategy of trying to design work
    institutions to produce desired employee behavior
  • This can be contrasted to a selection model (get
    the right people for the job)

4
Motivational goals
  • Before we can address the question of which are
    the appropriate models of employee motivation, we
    need to identify the workplace behaviors that we
    want to motivate

5
What behavior do we want from
employees?
  • I focus on two types of workplace behavior
  • Rule following
  • I follow organizational policies
  • I do not steal, etc.
  • Job performance
  • I do my job well (in-role, required tasks)
  • I volunteer to help (extra-role tasks)

6
Why do we want these motivations?
  • The occurrence of these behaviors facilitates the
    efficiency and effectiveness of organizations
    (organizational psychology)
  • Employee engagement in organizations enhances
    employees psychological well being (positive
    psychology)

7
Possible motivations for employee
workplace behavior
  • I will distinguish between two basic types of
    employee motivation
  • Reward based motives
  • Command and control
  • Pay for performance
  • Reinforcement based leadership
  • Social motives

8
Reward-based motivations
  • Incentives pay for good work
  • Sanctions punishment for rule breaking
  • Level of rewards received
  • Salary, benefits
  • Future opportunities for promotion
  • Relative to other possibilities

9
Social motives
  • Attitudes Things that people want to do
  • Intrinsic motivation (I like my job)
  • Commitment (I like my organization)
  • Loyalty (I like my supervisor)
  • Values Things that people feel that they ought
    to do
  • Personal responsibility and obligation

10
Two types of behavior
  • Mandatory (Required)
  • Discretionary (Voluntary)

11
A typology of behavior
Mandatory (Required) Discretionary (Voluntary)
Rule following Compliance Deference
Job performance In-role behavior Extra-role behavior
12
Question 1 What motivates employee
behavior in the workplace?
  • This is an empirical issue.
  • I will report the results of several efforts to
    address it.
  • Multi-company study
  • Single corporation study - bankers

13
Multi-company study
  • 401 employees drawn from various companies in the
    New York area
  • Employees complete questionnaires
  • Evaluating their workplace
  • Reporting on workplace behavior
  • From Tom Tyler and Steve Blader (2000),
    Cooperation in Groups, Philadelphia Psychology
    Press.

14
Study of a single corporation
  • New York City-based financial services company
    (banking)
  • 540 private banking group employees
  • Completed questionnaires about their workplace
  • Independent supervisor ratings of employee
    behavior

15
Rule-following behaviors
  • Rule following
  • Mandatory (Compliance)
  • How often do you comply with work related rules
    and regulations
  • Voluntary (Deference)
  • How often do you willingly follow corporate
    policies?
  • How often do you follow rules when no one is
    watching what you do?

16
Job performance behaviors
  • Mandatory (In-role behavior)
  • How often do you adequately complete your
    required work projects?
  • Voluntary (Extra-role behavior)
  • How often do you volunteer to do things that are
    not required by your job?

17
Instrumental motivation(multi-company study)
  • Incentives (rewards for performance)
  • If you do your job well, how much does that
    improve your pay and benefits?
  • Sanctions (punishment for rule breaking)
  • If you are caught breaking a rule, how much does
    it hurt your pay and benefits?

18
Instrumental motivation(multi-company study)
  • Level of rewards received
  • Overall, I receive excellent pay and benefits
    where I work
  • I have good opportunities for promotion.
  • It would be very difficult for me to find another
    job with the pay and benefits of my current job.

19
Measuring internal motivation (multi-company
study)
  • Intrinsic motivation
  • My job is enjoyable, worthwhile
  • Commitment to work organization
  • I feel that the organization for which I work
    deserves my loyalty.

20
Measuring internal motivation (multi-company
study)
  • Values Legitimacy
  • I feel that I should accept the decisions of my
    supervisor, even when I think they are wrong.
  • Work organizations are most effective when people
    follow the directives of their supervisors

21
Measuring internal motivation(multi-company
study)
  • Value congruence
  • My moral values and the values of my work
    organization are very similar.

22
What shapes employee workplace behavior?
(multi-company study)
Note. Entries are the total variance explained
by rewards, attitudes, and
values.
23
What shapes employee workplace behavior?
(multi-company study / unique
variance explained)
Note. Entries are the unique variance explained
by each cluster of variables.
24
Distinguishing the influence of attitudesand
values on work behavior(multi-company study /
unique variance explained)
25
What shapes employee rule-following behavior in
the workplace?(single corporation study)
Entries are the unique variance explained by each
factor.
26
What shapes employee rule-following behavior in
the workplace?(single corporation study)
Using an independent indicator of rule-following
behavior
Note. Entries are beta weights for a regression
equation. The dependent variable is the
supervisors rating of employee rule-following
behavior.
27
Conclusion 1
  • Employees attitudes and values have an important
    influence on behavior in the workplace

28
Question 2. What characteristics of employees
work environments shape their behavior?
  • We can compare the influence of three issues
  • Rule/policy favorability
  • Organizational rules usually lead to decisions
    that favor me.
  • Rule/policy fairness
  • How fair are the outcomes you receive from your
    work organization?
  • The fairness of organizational procedures
  • How fairly does your organization make decisions?

29
The idea of procedural justice
  • People value being the members of an organization
    that they experience as making its decisions
    fairly
  • Bruno Frey Procedural utility
  • The empirical question
  • Does procedural justice influence employees
    attitudes, values, and behaviors?

30
The influence of the work environment(multi-compa
ny study)
Entries are the total variance explained.
31
Results of the multi-company study
Entries are beta weights for regression equations.
32
Results of the single corporation study
Entries are beta weights for regression equations
33
Conclusion 2
  • The justice of organizational procedures shapes
    employees attitudes, values, and behaviors
  • It also strongly influences employees behavior

34
Question 3. What shapes judgments about the
procedural justice of workplace rules and
policies?
  • Issues
  • Quality of decision making
  • Neutrality, objectivity, consistency
  • Quality of treatment
  • Consideration, treatment with dignity
  • Sources
  • Organizational rules
  • Ones workgroup, supervisor

35
Factors shaping procedural justice judgments
Multi- company study Single corporation study
Quality of decision-making (org.) .26 .19
Quality of decision-making (super.) .31 .22
Quality of treatment (org.) .24 .43
Quality of treatment (super.) .25 .12
Adj. R-sq. 79 66
36
Conclusion 3
  • Organizational culture shapes judgments about the
    fairness of organizational procedures.

37
Question 4. Why does procedural justice matter?
  • There are two bodies of social psychological
    theory that address the relationship between
    people and organizations
  • Social exchange theorypeople want resources
  • Get them from exchanges in group contexts (pay
    for work)
  • Social identity theorypeople want a favorable
    identity
  • Draw it, in part, from the status of the groups
    to which they belong

38
Indicators from each model
  • Social exchange
  • Level of resources
  • Incentive mechanisms
  • Social identity
  • Identification-how much of self is drawn from
    group membership
  • PrideStatus of the group
  • RespectStatus in the group

39
Model
Procedural justice
Identification
Attitudes, values, behaviors
40
Elements that shape group engagement
(multi-company study)
Note. Entries are beta weights.
41
Elements of the group that shape identification
(single corporation study)
Note. Entries are beta weights.
42
Identification and group engagement
(multi-company study)
Note. Entries are the average Pearson
correlation within each cell.
43
Identification, attitudes and behavior(single
corporation study)
Note. Entries are the average Pearson
correlation within each cell.
44
  • So, when people feel that group procedures are
    fair
  • They identify with their group
  • They engage themselves in that group

45
  • How does identification fit into the procedural
    justice-cooperative behavior relationship?
  • Identification mediates the relationship between
    procedural justice and engagement.

46
The relationship between procedural justice and
engagement in groups Identification as a
mediator(Tyler and Blader, 2000)
47
Why? Because procedural justice communicates
status-relevant information
  • Procedural justice judgments communicate status
    - Shape ones sense of self
  • Quality of decision making
  • Neutrality
  • Quality of treatment
  • Consideration, concern, politeness, dignity,
    rights recognition

48
Identification and self-esteem (sample of
corporate employees)
Identification Level of resources Policy favorability
Self-esteem (Crocker) .47 .16 .15
Note. Entries are Pearson correlations.
49
  • Identification has broader positive consequences
    it leads to
  • Voluntary rule following
  • Voluntary actions designed to help the group
  • High self-esteem/self-worth

50
Groups can facilitate employee identification
  • The key to so doing is to have fair procedures
  • Quality of decision making
  • Quality of treatment

51
Conclusion 4
  • People care about the fairness of organizational
    procedures because Procedural Fairness signals
    identity-relevant information
  • Organizations are important shapers of
    self-identities

52
Summary Procedural justice and the organization
of labor
  • Employee behavior in work organizations is
    indepen-dently influenced by noninstrumental
    motivations
  • Attitudes and values
  • Procedural justice judgments
  • Issues of quality of decision-making and
    treatment
  • Identity and status evaluation
  • Identification
  • Pride, respect

53
Implications
We will gain in our ability to understand what
motivates employees by incorporating social
motives of the type I have outlined into our
models. We will also be better able to design
work organizations.
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