Members of frontline low-status occupational groups often have access to a vast pool of knowledge, expertise, and experience that may be valuable for organizations. However, previous research has shown that members of these occupational groups are often reluctant to exhibit voice behavior due to their low position in the organizational hierarchy and perceived status differences. Drawing on in-depth interviews with auxiliary nurses (ANs) who participated in a development trajectory, as well as with their colleagues and supervisors, we demonstrate how members of this low-status occupational group develop voice behavior. Our findings show how acquiring three different types of knowledge and acting on this knowledge can lead to forming new and ...
In this dissertation, I investigate an under-appreciated antecedent of prohibitive voice in organiza...
This is the author accepted manuscript.Given the equivocal findings pertaining to the outcomes of vo...
In general, reciprocal supervisor–subordinate relationships (high leader–member exchange relationshi...
Much of the research on employee voice has focused on voice as a property of the individual, emphasi...
The purpose of this paper is to understand better why employees voice. Drawing on social information...
In this symposium, we aim to shed more light on the relationship between leadership and employee voi...
Contains fulltext : 200626.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Speaking up and...
This qualitative study explores the typology of employee improvement-oriented voice, or the ideas an...
It has been shown that employee constructive voice (e.g., making constructive suggestions) has signi...
Soliciting and incorporating employee voice is essential to organizational performance, yet some man...
We investigated the role of employees' status appraisals within their work group in relation to thei...
Speaking up and confronting co-workers when they behave undesirably is important for the well-being ...
Leaders rely on other organizational members to speak up with ideas for improvement, or to alert the...
By drawing from cue consensus theory and status characteristic theory, we argue that the consensus b...
We adopt a relational approach to examine the effects of social relations and formal structure on wh...
In this dissertation, I investigate an under-appreciated antecedent of prohibitive voice in organiza...
This is the author accepted manuscript.Given the equivocal findings pertaining to the outcomes of vo...
In general, reciprocal supervisor–subordinate relationships (high leader–member exchange relationshi...
Much of the research on employee voice has focused on voice as a property of the individual, emphasi...
The purpose of this paper is to understand better why employees voice. Drawing on social information...
In this symposium, we aim to shed more light on the relationship between leadership and employee voi...
Contains fulltext : 200626.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Speaking up and...
This qualitative study explores the typology of employee improvement-oriented voice, or the ideas an...
It has been shown that employee constructive voice (e.g., making constructive suggestions) has signi...
Soliciting and incorporating employee voice is essential to organizational performance, yet some man...
We investigated the role of employees' status appraisals within their work group in relation to thei...
Speaking up and confronting co-workers when they behave undesirably is important for the well-being ...
Leaders rely on other organizational members to speak up with ideas for improvement, or to alert the...
By drawing from cue consensus theory and status characteristic theory, we argue that the consensus b...
We adopt a relational approach to examine the effects of social relations and formal structure on wh...
In this dissertation, I investigate an under-appreciated antecedent of prohibitive voice in organiza...
This is the author accepted manuscript.Given the equivocal findings pertaining to the outcomes of vo...
In general, reciprocal supervisor–subordinate relationships (high leader–member exchange relationshi...