Organizational Justice and Human Resource Management, Volume 7

Front Cover
Why are some acts but not others perceived to be fair? How do people who experience unfairness respond toward others held accountable for the unfairness? This book reviews the theoretical organizational justice literature and explores how the research on justice applies to various topics in organizational behaviour including personnel selection systems, performance appraisal and the role of fairness in resolving workplace conflict.

Organizational Justice and Human Resource Management considers justice in organizations within a new framework - Fairness Theory - which integrates previous work in this area by focusing on accountability for events with negative impact on material and psychological well-being.

From inside the book

Contents

Chapter 1 Equity and Distributive Justice as Outcome Fairness
1
Chapter 2 Process as Procedural and Interactional Justice
25
Chapter 3 Two Theoretical Syntheses
50
On the Horns of a Justice Dilemma?
81
Test and Trial Metaphors
108
Social Accounts Third Parties and Grievance Systems
133
Chapter 7 Toward a General Theory of Fairness
173
Chapter 8 Future Directions
197
References
236
Author Index
264
Subject Index
272
About the Authors
277
Copyright

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