Drawing on a study of members of the U.K. National Union of Teachers, this article considers the extent to which economic exchange, social exchange, and covenantal considerations underpin union members' willingness to continue membership and to participate actively in their union through union citizenship behaviors (UCB). Findings suggest that the more activist forms of UCB were motivated primarily by a perceived covenantal relationship with the union. In contrast, exchange, particularly social exchange, motivations played more of a role in motivating less demanding "rank and file" UCB and intent to quit the union. Union instrumentality appeared to be a necessary but insufficient condition for union viability, having an indirect effect on U...
This study examines member mobilization using a British community organization and a British trade u...
Following Friedman and Harvey's (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitmen...
This research sits with recent efforts to examine the group-processes that underpin collective actio...
Drawing on a study of 423 union members in a UK Primary Care Trust, we use structural equation model...
Based on studies of unionized nurses and water workers in the United Kingdom, perceived union suppor...
Based on studies of unionized nurses and water workers in the United Kingdom, perceived union suppor...
Contributing to an emerging literature on solidarity or group-norm effects on union participation, t...
Using survey data from a UK fire service, this article examines the antecedents of members’ intent t...
This study examines two widely researched attitudes of union members—satisfaction with and commitmen...
This paper evaluates whether nature of the union moderates the antecedents of union commitment and p...
Basically, unions offer the promise of a number of benefits in order to solicit members’ commitment....
Contributing to an emerging literature on solidarity or group-norm effects on union participation, t...
Following Friedman and Harvey’s (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitme...
Following Friedman and Harvey’s (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitmen...
This paper examines the pattern and consequences of commitment to organisation and union amongst uni...
This study examines member mobilization using a British community organization and a British trade u...
Following Friedman and Harvey's (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitmen...
This research sits with recent efforts to examine the group-processes that underpin collective actio...
Drawing on a study of 423 union members in a UK Primary Care Trust, we use structural equation model...
Based on studies of unionized nurses and water workers in the United Kingdom, perceived union suppor...
Based on studies of unionized nurses and water workers in the United Kingdom, perceived union suppor...
Contributing to an emerging literature on solidarity or group-norm effects on union participation, t...
Using survey data from a UK fire service, this article examines the antecedents of members’ intent t...
This study examines two widely researched attitudes of union members—satisfaction with and commitmen...
This paper evaluates whether nature of the union moderates the antecedents of union commitment and p...
Basically, unions offer the promise of a number of benefits in order to solicit members’ commitment....
Contributing to an emerging literature on solidarity or group-norm effects on union participation, t...
Following Friedman and Harvey’s (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitme...
Following Friedman and Harvey’s (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitmen...
This paper examines the pattern and consequences of commitment to organisation and union amongst uni...
This study examines member mobilization using a British community organization and a British trade u...
Following Friedman and Harvey's (1986) call for additional theory development of the union commitmen...
This research sits with recent efforts to examine the group-processes that underpin collective actio...