The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance

Previous research has examined a number constructs that are associated with the experience of discrimination; however, previous studies are limited in three ways. First, most research has focused on determining the attitudinal outcomes (i.e., job satisfaction, organizational commitment, turnover int...

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Other Authors: Hebl, Michelle R.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1911/61816
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spelling ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-618162013-05-01T03:46:19ZThe differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performancePsychologySocialBusiness AdministrationManagementPsychologyIndustrialPrevious research has examined a number constructs that are associated with the experience of discrimination; however, previous studies are limited in three ways. First, most research has focused on determining the attitudinal outcomes (i.e., job satisfaction, organizational commitment, turnover intentions) associated with perceptions of discrimination. Second, previous research examines discrimination primarily as an outcome and not a predictor. Third, previous research has neglected to examine discrimination during an ongoing social interaction. This dissertation corrects for these limitations and extends previous research by examining the impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination (either in isolation or combined) on performance. Results reveal a number of attitudinal as well as behavioral outcomes resulting from discrimination. Specifically, the experience of interpersonal and combined (simultaneously experiencing both interpersonal and formal discrimination) discrimination resulted in impaired performance. In addition, experiencing any type of discrimination (interpersonal, formal, or combined) reduced intentions to engage in future acts of helping behavior, positive perceptions of the assessor, perceptions of interactional justice, and independent coders' perceptions of participant effort on task. A number of theoretical and practical implications are discussed.Hebl, Michelle R.2011-07-25T01:38:19Z2011-07-25T01:38:19Z2009ThesisTextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1911/61816eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Social
Business Administration
Management
Psychology
Industrial
spellingShingle Psychology
Social
Business Administration
Management
Psychology
Industrial
The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
description Previous research has examined a number constructs that are associated with the experience of discrimination; however, previous studies are limited in three ways. First, most research has focused on determining the attitudinal outcomes (i.e., job satisfaction, organizational commitment, turnover intentions) associated with perceptions of discrimination. Second, previous research examines discrimination primarily as an outcome and not a predictor. Third, previous research has neglected to examine discrimination during an ongoing social interaction. This dissertation corrects for these limitations and extends previous research by examining the impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination (either in isolation or combined) on performance. Results reveal a number of attitudinal as well as behavioral outcomes resulting from discrimination. Specifically, the experience of interpersonal and combined (simultaneously experiencing both interpersonal and formal discrimination) discrimination resulted in impaired performance. In addition, experiencing any type of discrimination (interpersonal, formal, or combined) reduced intentions to engage in future acts of helping behavior, positive perceptions of the assessor, perceptions of interactional justice, and independent coders' perceptions of participant effort on task. A number of theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
author2 Hebl, Michelle R.
author_facet Hebl, Michelle R.
title The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
title_short The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
title_full The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
title_fullStr The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
title_full_unstemmed The differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
title_sort differential impact of formal and interpersonal discrimination on job performance
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1911/61816
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