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Predicting in-role and extra-role performance by gender

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conference contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by D Jepsen, John Rodwell
Men and women are said to perceive justice differently, with women proposed to be more concerned with relational issues and men focused more on material issues. In this study, the potential for differential effects of justice on performance by gender was analyzed across the four contemporary types of justice. Respondents were 265 male and 113 female occupationally diverse employees in a single organization. The results show significant differences in how men and women respond to the four justice types with only one - informational justice - acting similarly by gender. Women were more interested in maintaining social harmony than men. The results appear to strongly support the use of the justice judgment model over the group-value model as a means of explaining the gender differences. Implications for management include the importance of informational justice both generally and within the performance appraisal process

History

Event

Pacific Employment Relations Association Conference (8th : 2008 : Ballarat, Victoria)

Pagination

107 - 118

Publisher

Ballarat University

Location

Ballarat, Australia

Place of publication

Ballarat, Vic.

Start date

2008-11-19

End date

2008-11-22

ISBN-13

9781876851347

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication

Copyright notice

2008, Pacific Employment Relations Association

Editor/Contributor(s)

C O'Connor

Title of proceedings

PERA 2008 : Proceedings of The 8th Annual Pacific Employment Relations Association Conference

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