4.6 Article

A Meta-Analytic Investigation of the Antecedents, Theoretical Correlates, and Consequences of Moral Disengagement at Work

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 5, Pages 746-775

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/apl0000912

Keywords

moral disengagement; workplace misconduct; organizational citizenship behavior; dark traits; meta-analysis

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The study provides a comprehensive meta-analytic review of moral disengagement at work, revealing its associations with various individual and contextual factors, theoretical correlates, and outcomes. Moral disengagement is significantly linked to workplace misconduct and turnover, while showing a negative relationship with OCBs and task performance. Despite its role in promoting misconduct, moral disengagement also correlates with post-wrongdoing guilt and shame.
Moral disengagement refers to a set of cognitive tactics people employ to sidestep moral self-regulatory processes that normally prevent wrongdoing. In this study, we present a comprehensive meta-analytic review of the nomological network of moral disengagement at work. First, we test its dispositional and contextual antecedents, theoretical correlates, and consequences, including ethics (workplace misconduct and organizational citizenship behaviors [OCBs]) and non-ethics outcomes (turnover intentions and task performance). Second, we examine Bandura's postulation that moral disengagement fosters misconduct by diminishing moral cognitions (moral awareness and moral judgment) and anticipatory moral self-condemning emotions (guilt). We also test a contrarian view that moral disengagement is limited in its capacity to effectively curtail moral emotions after wrongdoing. The results show that Honesty-Humility, guilt proneness, moral identity, trait empathy, conscientiousness, idealism, and relativism are key individual antecedents. Further, abusive supervision and perceived organizational politics are strong contextual enablers of moral disengagement, while ethical leadership and organizational justice are relatively weak deterrents. We also found that narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and psychological entitlement are key theoretical correlates, although moral disengagement shows incremental validity over these dark traits. Next, moral disengagement was positively associated with workplace misconduct and turnover intentions, and negatively related to OCBs and task performance. Its positive impact on misconduct was mediated by lower moral awareness, moral judgment, and anticipated guilt. Interestingly, however, moral disengagement was positively related to guilt and shame post-misconduct. In sum, we find strong cumulative evidence for the pertinence of moral disengagement in the workplace.

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