Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States

Recently, scholars have emphasized the importance of examining how employees cope with psychological contract violation and how the coping process contributes to psychological contract violation resolution and post-violation psychological contracts. Recent work points to the important role of proble...

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Main Authors: René Schalk, Melanie De Ruiter, Joost Van Loon, Evy Kuijpers, Tine Van Regenmortel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00054/full
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spelling doaj-7e95334aa9984ac695fc0aa059526c7f2020-11-24T21:36:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-02-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.00054307797Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End StatesRené Schalk0René Schalk1René Schalk2Melanie De Ruiter3Joost Van Loon4Evy Kuijpers5Tine Van Regenmortel6Tine Van Regenmortel7Tranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg, NetherlandsHR Studies, Tilburg University, Tilburg, NetherlandsEconomic and Management Sciences, North-West University, Potchefstroom, South AfricaCenter for Leadership and Management Development, Nyenrode Business University, Breukelen, NetherlandsHR Studies, Tilburg University, Tilburg, NetherlandsHR Studies, Tilburg University, Tilburg, NetherlandsTranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg, NetherlandsHIVA, KU Leuven, Leuven, BelgiumRecently, scholars have emphasized the importance of examining how employees cope with psychological contract violation and how the coping process contributes to psychological contract violation resolution and post-violation psychological contracts. Recent work points to the important role of problem-focused coping. Yet, to date, problem-focused coping strategies have not been conceptualized on a continuum from constructive to destructive strategies. Consequently, potential differences in the use of specific types of problem-focused coping strategies and the role these different strategies play in the violation resolution process has not been explored. In this study, we stress the importance of focusing on different types of problem-focused coping strategies. We explore how employee upward dissent strategies, conceptualized as different forms of problem-focused coping, contribute to violation resolution and post-violation psychological contracts. Two sources of data were used. In-depth interviews with supervisors of a Dutch car lease company provided 23 case descriptions of employee-supervisor interactions after a psychological contract violation. Moreover, a database with descriptions of Dutch court sentences provided eight case descriptions of employee-organization interactions following a perceived violation. Based on these data sources, we explored the pattern of upward dissent strategies employees used over time following a perceived violation. We distinguished between functional (thriving and reactivation), dysfunctional (impairment and dissolution) and deserted psychological contract end states and explored whether different dissent patterns over time differentially contributed to the dissent outcome (i.e., psychological contract end state). The results of our study showed that the use of problem-focused coping is not as straightforward as suggested by the post-violation model. While the post-violation model suggests that problem-focused coping will most likely contribute positively to violation resolution, we found that this also depends on the type of problem-focused coping strategy used. That is, more threatening forms of problem-focused coping (i.e., threatening resignation as a way to trigger one’s manager/organization to resolve the violation) mainly contributed to dysfunctional and deserted PC end states. Yet, in some instances the use of these types of active coping strategies also contributed to functional violation resolution. These findings have important implications for the literature on upward dissent strategies and psychological contract violation repair.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00054/fullpsychological contract violation resolutionproblem-focused copingupward dissentpsychological contract end statespost-violation model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author René Schalk
René Schalk
René Schalk
Melanie De Ruiter
Joost Van Loon
Evy Kuijpers
Tine Van Regenmortel
Tine Van Regenmortel
spellingShingle René Schalk
René Schalk
René Schalk
Melanie De Ruiter
Joost Van Loon
Evy Kuijpers
Tine Van Regenmortel
Tine Van Regenmortel
Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States
Frontiers in Psychology
psychological contract violation resolution
problem-focused coping
upward dissent
psychological contract end states
post-violation model
author_facet René Schalk
René Schalk
René Schalk
Melanie De Ruiter
Joost Van Loon
Evy Kuijpers
Tine Van Regenmortel
Tine Van Regenmortel
author_sort René Schalk
title Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States
title_short Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States
title_full Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States
title_fullStr Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States
title_full_unstemmed Actively Coping with Violation: Exploring Upward Dissent Patterns in Functional, Dysfunctional, and Deserted Psychological Contract End States
title_sort actively coping with violation: exploring upward dissent patterns in functional, dysfunctional, and deserted psychological contract end states
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Recently, scholars have emphasized the importance of examining how employees cope with psychological contract violation and how the coping process contributes to psychological contract violation resolution and post-violation psychological contracts. Recent work points to the important role of problem-focused coping. Yet, to date, problem-focused coping strategies have not been conceptualized on a continuum from constructive to destructive strategies. Consequently, potential differences in the use of specific types of problem-focused coping strategies and the role these different strategies play in the violation resolution process has not been explored. In this study, we stress the importance of focusing on different types of problem-focused coping strategies. We explore how employee upward dissent strategies, conceptualized as different forms of problem-focused coping, contribute to violation resolution and post-violation psychological contracts. Two sources of data were used. In-depth interviews with supervisors of a Dutch car lease company provided 23 case descriptions of employee-supervisor interactions after a psychological contract violation. Moreover, a database with descriptions of Dutch court sentences provided eight case descriptions of employee-organization interactions following a perceived violation. Based on these data sources, we explored the pattern of upward dissent strategies employees used over time following a perceived violation. We distinguished between functional (thriving and reactivation), dysfunctional (impairment and dissolution) and deserted psychological contract end states and explored whether different dissent patterns over time differentially contributed to the dissent outcome (i.e., psychological contract end state). The results of our study showed that the use of problem-focused coping is not as straightforward as suggested by the post-violation model. While the post-violation model suggests that problem-focused coping will most likely contribute positively to violation resolution, we found that this also depends on the type of problem-focused coping strategy used. That is, more threatening forms of problem-focused coping (i.e., threatening resignation as a way to trigger one’s manager/organization to resolve the violation) mainly contributed to dysfunctional and deserted PC end states. Yet, in some instances the use of these types of active coping strategies also contributed to functional violation resolution. These findings have important implications for the literature on upward dissent strategies and psychological contract violation repair.
topic psychological contract violation resolution
problem-focused coping
upward dissent
psychological contract end states
post-violation model
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00054/full
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