TY - JOUR
T1 - Racial differences in sensitivity to behavioral integrity
T2 - Attitudinal consequences, in-group effects, and "trickle down" among Black and non-Black employees
AU - Simons, Tony
AU - Friedman, Ray
AU - Liu, Leigh Anne
AU - McLean Parks, Judi
PY - 2007/5
Y1 - 2007/5
N2 - Recent research has suggested that employees are highly affected by perceptions of their managers' pattern of word-action consistency, which T. Simons (2002) called behavioral integrity (BI). The authors of the present study suggest that some employee racial groups may be more attentive to BI than others. They tested this notion using data from 1,944 employees working at 107 different hotels and found that Black employees rated their managers as demonstrating lower BI than did non-Black employees. Mediation analyses were consistent with the notion that these differences in perceived BI in turn account for cross-race differences in trust in management, interpersonal justice, commitment, satisfaction, and intent to stay. Results of hierarchical linear modeling were consistent with the idea that middle managers' perceptions of their senior managers' BI "trickle down" to affect line employee perceptions of the middle managers and that this trickle-down effect is stronger for Black employees. The authors interpret these results as indicative of heightened sensitivity to managers' BI on the part of Black employees. They also found a reverse in-group effect, in that Black employees were substantially more critical of Black managers than were non-Black employees. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved.
AB - Recent research has suggested that employees are highly affected by perceptions of their managers' pattern of word-action consistency, which T. Simons (2002) called behavioral integrity (BI). The authors of the present study suggest that some employee racial groups may be more attentive to BI than others. They tested this notion using data from 1,944 employees working at 107 different hotels and found that Black employees rated their managers as demonstrating lower BI than did non-Black employees. Mediation analyses were consistent with the notion that these differences in perceived BI in turn account for cross-race differences in trust in management, interpersonal justice, commitment, satisfaction, and intent to stay. Results of hierarchical linear modeling were consistent with the idea that middle managers' perceptions of their senior managers' BI "trickle down" to affect line employee perceptions of the middle managers and that this trickle-down effect is stronger for Black employees. The authors interpret these results as indicative of heightened sensitivity to managers' BI on the part of Black employees. They also found a reverse in-group effect, in that Black employees were substantially more critical of Black managers than were non-Black employees. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved.
KW - Behavioral integrity
KW - Diversity and race
KW - Employee attitudes
KW - Justice
KW - Trickle down
KW - Trust
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/34248382497
U2 - 10.1037/0021-9010.92.3.650
DO - 10.1037/0021-9010.92.3.650
M3 - Article
C2 - 17484548
AN - SCOPUS:34248382497
SN - 0021-9010
VL - 92
SP - 650
EP - 665
JO - Journal of Applied Psychology
JF - Journal of Applied Psychology
IS - 3
ER -