Instrumental and value-expressive models of procedural justice were the basis of a field study with 612 employees of a large county government. The purpose was to identify the standards used to assess the fairness of pay procedures, and to determine the extent to which instrumental and value-expressive models of procedural justice explain procedural assessments. Results support the inference that both instrumental and value-expressive evaluation standards are used for fairness judgments of pay procedures. Results also indicate that the relevance of instrumental and value-expressive standards is dependent upon the component of the pay process being evaluated and the criterion referent
This research identifies the essential factors which influence employees' fairness perceptions of th...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
Employees are concerned with the fairness of organizational outcomes they receive and the fairness o...
Instrumental and value-expressive models of procedural justice were the basis of a field study with ...
Using a stratified sample of 506 occupationally heterogenous employees of a large County government ...
Blader and Tyler (2003), following the 'Organisational Justice' school of thought, attempted to furt...
Using agency theory and the stakeholder fairness concept as the conceptual base, this study confirme...
An organizational field study (n = 257) investigated employees' acceptance of a new merit pay system...
The quality of procedures is believed to play an important role in access to justice. It is assumed,...
Skill-based pay is a reward system innovation in which individuals are compensated based on the skil...
Justice rules are standards that serve as criteria for formulating fairness judgments. Though justic...
Relationships between justice perceptions and pay satisfaction were examined using Colquitt’s (2001)...
This research identifies the essential factors which influence employees' fairness perceptions of th...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
Employees are concerned with the fairness of organizational outcomes they receive and the fairness o...
Instrumental and value-expressive models of procedural justice were the basis of a field study with ...
Using a stratified sample of 506 occupationally heterogenous employees of a large County government ...
Blader and Tyler (2003), following the 'Organisational Justice' school of thought, attempted to furt...
Using agency theory and the stakeholder fairness concept as the conceptual base, this study confirme...
An organizational field study (n = 257) investigated employees' acceptance of a new merit pay system...
The quality of procedures is believed to play an important role in access to justice. It is assumed,...
Skill-based pay is a reward system innovation in which individuals are compensated based on the skil...
Justice rules are standards that serve as criteria for formulating fairness judgments. Though justic...
Relationships between justice perceptions and pay satisfaction were examined using Colquitt’s (2001)...
This research identifies the essential factors which influence employees' fairness perceptions of th...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
Employees are concerned with the fairness of organizational outcomes they receive and the fairness o...