Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight

This study attempts to advance the current research debate on corporate social responsibility (CSR) at the micro-level by empirically examining the effect of perceived CSR on employee behaviors such as turnover intention and workplace deviance with the mediation mechanism of organizational identific...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Faisal Mahmood, Faisal Qadeer, Zaheer Abbas, Muhammadi, Iqtidar Hussain, Maria Saleem, Akhlaq Hussain, Jaffar Aman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/7/2647
id doaj-0ec3bb34a614443f9a99d190941e4221
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0ec3bb34a614443f9a99d190941e42212020-11-25T02:39:34ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-03-01127264710.3390/su12072647su12072647Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel InsightFaisal Mahmood0Faisal Qadeer1Zaheer Abbas2Muhammadi3Iqtidar Hussain4Maria Saleem5Akhlaq Hussain6Jaffar Aman7Lahore Business School, the University of Lahore, Lahore 54000, PakistanLahore Business School, the University of Lahore, Lahore 54000, PakistanSchool of Management and Economics, Kunming University of Sciences and Technology, Kunming 650000, ChinaSchool of International Relations and Public Affairs, Shanghai International Studies University, Shanghai 200000, ChinaSchool of International Relations and Public Affairs, Shanghai International Studies University, Shanghai 200000, ChinaLahore Business School, the University of Lahore, Lahore 54000, PakistanSchool of Economics and Management, Shanghai University of Sport China, Shanghai 200000, ChinaPostdoctoral Station of Public Administration and Sociology, Hohai University Nanjing, Nanjing 210000, China.This study attempts to advance the current research debate on corporate social responsibility (CSR) at the micro-level by empirically examining the effect of perceived CSR on employee behaviors such as turnover intention and workplace deviance with the mediation mechanism of organizational identification. The boundary condition of group-level abusive supervision also enhances the novelty of this research. Social identity theory is used for hypotheses development. Multilevel data is collected from 410 middle managers working in thirteen commercial banks in Pakistan by conducting three surveys with temporal breaks. Our results suggest that employees’ perceived CSR is statistically and inversely related to their turnover intention and deviant behavior, along with the mediation mechanism of organizational identification. Further, this relationship is weakened with the moderation of abusive supervision. Specifically, our findings indicate that employees’ positive CSR perceptions minimize their undesired workplace behaviors through the mediation of organizational identification. But this effect becomes less effective with the contingency of abusive supervision. Our results reveal several means by which organizations can manage their CSR initiatives and human resources, for instance by concentrating on abusive supervision while evaluating their employees’ behavior.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/7/2647corporate social responsibilityorganizational identificationabusive supervisionturnover intentionworkplace deviance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Faisal Mahmood
Faisal Qadeer
Zaheer Abbas
Muhammadi
Iqtidar Hussain
Maria Saleem
Akhlaq Hussain
Jaffar Aman
spellingShingle Faisal Mahmood
Faisal Qadeer
Zaheer Abbas
Muhammadi
Iqtidar Hussain
Maria Saleem
Akhlaq Hussain
Jaffar Aman
Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight
Sustainability
corporate social responsibility
organizational identification
abusive supervision
turnover intention
workplace deviance
author_facet Faisal Mahmood
Faisal Qadeer
Zaheer Abbas
Muhammadi
Iqtidar Hussain
Maria Saleem
Akhlaq Hussain
Jaffar Aman
author_sort Faisal Mahmood
title Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight
title_short Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight
title_full Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight
title_fullStr Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight
title_full_unstemmed Corporate Social Responsibility and Employees’ Negative Behaviors under Abusive Supervision: A Multilevel Insight
title_sort corporate social responsibility and employees’ negative behaviors under abusive supervision: a multilevel insight
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-03-01
description This study attempts to advance the current research debate on corporate social responsibility (CSR) at the micro-level by empirically examining the effect of perceived CSR on employee behaviors such as turnover intention and workplace deviance with the mediation mechanism of organizational identification. The boundary condition of group-level abusive supervision also enhances the novelty of this research. Social identity theory is used for hypotheses development. Multilevel data is collected from 410 middle managers working in thirteen commercial banks in Pakistan by conducting three surveys with temporal breaks. Our results suggest that employees’ perceived CSR is statistically and inversely related to their turnover intention and deviant behavior, along with the mediation mechanism of organizational identification. Further, this relationship is weakened with the moderation of abusive supervision. Specifically, our findings indicate that employees’ positive CSR perceptions minimize their undesired workplace behaviors through the mediation of organizational identification. But this effect becomes less effective with the contingency of abusive supervision. Our results reveal several means by which organizations can manage their CSR initiatives and human resources, for instance by concentrating on abusive supervision while evaluating their employees’ behavior.
topic corporate social responsibility
organizational identification
abusive supervision
turnover intention
workplace deviance
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/7/2647
work_keys_str_mv AT faisalmahmood corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT faisalqadeer corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT zaheerabbas corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT muhammadi corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT iqtidarhussain corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT mariasaleem corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT akhlaqhussain corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
AT jaffaraman corporatesocialresponsibilityandemployeesnegativebehaviorsunderabusivesupervisionamultilevelinsight
_version_ 1724785294359658496