Journal
JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 65-86Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/job.1793
Keywords
perceived organizational membership; organizational identification; psychological contract breach; transformational leadership; transactional leadership; procedural justice climate; self-concept
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Drawing on the perceived organizational membership theoretical framework and the social identity view of dissonance theory, I examined in this study the dynamics of the relationship between psychological contract breach and organizational identification. I included group-level transformational and transactional leadership as well as procedural justice in the hypothesized model as key antecedents for organizational membership processes. I further explored the mediating role of psychological contract breach in the relationship between leadership, procedural justice climate, and organizational identification and proposed separatenessconnectedness self-schema as an important moderator of the above mediated relationship. Hierarchical linear modeling results from a sample of 864 employees from 162 work units in 10 Greek organizations indicated that employees' perception of psychological contract breach negatively affected their organizational identification. I also found psychological contract breach to mediate the impact of transformational and transactional leadership on organizational identification. Results further provided support for moderated mediation and showed that the indirect effects of transformational and transactional leadership on identification through psychological contract breach were stronger for employees with a low connectedness self-schema. Copyright (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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