Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness

Orientation: The increasing prevalence of theft, sabotage and other deviant behaviours in the workplace has disastrous effects for organisations, such as lowered effectiveness, escalated costs and the organisation’s declining reputation. Research purpose: The purpose of the research was to design a...

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Main Authors: Amos S. Engelbrecht, Janneke Wolmarans, Bright Mahembe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-01-01
Series:South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/781
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spelling doaj-b32a8f7502e447b5a80f8f3382fb8c222020-11-24T22:51:19ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Human Resource Management1683-75842071-078X2017-01-01150e1e810.4102/sajhrm.v15i0.781384Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectivenessAmos S. Engelbrecht0Janneke Wolmarans1Bright Mahembe2Department of Industrial Psychology, Stellenbosch UniversityDepartment of Industrial Psychology, Stellenbosch UniversityDepartment of Industrial Psychology, University of the Western CapeOrientation: The increasing prevalence of theft, sabotage and other deviant behaviours in the workplace has disastrous effects for organisations, such as lowered effectiveness, escalated costs and the organisation’s declining reputation. Research purpose: The purpose of the research was to design and investigate the relationships among perceived leader effectiveness, ethical climate and ethical leadership. A further objective of the investigation was to validate a conceptual model clarifying the structural associations among the latent constructs in the South African corporate domain. Motivation for the study: A successful leader is both an ethical and an effective leader. An organisation’s leadership is seen as the most critical element in establishing and maintaining an ethical climate in organisations. Research design, approach and method: A convenient and multi-cultural sample comprised of 224 employees from various organisations in South Africa. The structure and content of the variables were analysed through confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), beside item analysis. Main findings: Satisfactory reliability was found for all the measurement scales. The results of CFA demonstrated acceptable fit with the data for the refined measurement and structural models. The results of structural equation modelling (SEM) indicated positive relationships among ethical leadership, ethical climate and leader effectiveness. Practical implications: Organisational leaders should take full responsibility for cultivating ethics through ethical leader behaviour and an ethical climate. By reinforcing these aspects, perceived leader effectiveness can be advanced, which will ultimately decrease corruption and other forms of counterproductive behaviour in South African organisations. Contribution: The study provides further theoretical and empirical evidence that leadership effectiveness can be realised through instilling an ethical organisational climate in which ethical leadership is exhibited and encouraged.https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/781ethical leadershipethical climateleader effectiveness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amos S. Engelbrecht
Janneke Wolmarans
Bright Mahembe
spellingShingle Amos S. Engelbrecht
Janneke Wolmarans
Bright Mahembe
Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
South African Journal of Human Resource Management
ethical leadership
ethical climate
leader effectiveness
author_facet Amos S. Engelbrecht
Janneke Wolmarans
Bright Mahembe
author_sort Amos S. Engelbrecht
title Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
title_short Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
title_full Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
title_fullStr Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
title_sort effect of ethical leadership and climate on effectiveness
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1683-7584
2071-078X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Orientation: The increasing prevalence of theft, sabotage and other deviant behaviours in the workplace has disastrous effects for organisations, such as lowered effectiveness, escalated costs and the organisation’s declining reputation. Research purpose: The purpose of the research was to design and investigate the relationships among perceived leader effectiveness, ethical climate and ethical leadership. A further objective of the investigation was to validate a conceptual model clarifying the structural associations among the latent constructs in the South African corporate domain. Motivation for the study: A successful leader is both an ethical and an effective leader. An organisation’s leadership is seen as the most critical element in establishing and maintaining an ethical climate in organisations. Research design, approach and method: A convenient and multi-cultural sample comprised of 224 employees from various organisations in South Africa. The structure and content of the variables were analysed through confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), beside item analysis. Main findings: Satisfactory reliability was found for all the measurement scales. The results of CFA demonstrated acceptable fit with the data for the refined measurement and structural models. The results of structural equation modelling (SEM) indicated positive relationships among ethical leadership, ethical climate and leader effectiveness. Practical implications: Organisational leaders should take full responsibility for cultivating ethics through ethical leader behaviour and an ethical climate. By reinforcing these aspects, perceived leader effectiveness can be advanced, which will ultimately decrease corruption and other forms of counterproductive behaviour in South African organisations. Contribution: The study provides further theoretical and empirical evidence that leadership effectiveness can be realised through instilling an ethical organisational climate in which ethical leadership is exhibited and encouraged.
topic ethical leadership
ethical climate
leader effectiveness
url https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/781
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