Employees' perceived job performance, organizational identification, and pro-environmental behaviors in the hotel industry

•Organizational identification influences employees’ pro-environmental behaviors.•Perceived job performance predicts organizational identification.•Perceived job performance predicts pro-environmental behaviors.•Perceived job performance affects pro-environmental behaviors via organizational identif...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of hospitality management 2020-09, Vol.90, p.102632, Article 102632
Hauptverfasser: Peng, Xuerong, Lee, Seoki, Lu, Zhenglan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Organizational identification influences employees’ pro-environmental behaviors.•Perceived job performance predicts organizational identification.•Perceived job performance predicts pro-environmental behaviors.•Perceived job performance affects pro-environmental behaviors via organizational identification. Employees' engagement in pro-environmental behaviors (PEBs) is crucial for greening hotels and improving hotel performance. This paper argues that we can explore employees' PEB motivations from a positive externality/spillover perspective because such voluntary behaviors benefit actors other than the employees, namely, the hotels that employ them and the surrounding natural environment. Accordingly, compensation and internalization could motivate employees' PEBs. This paper attempts to advance research on internalization by focusing on the oneness between employees and organizations and by proposing that organizational identification (OI) is an essential predictor of employees' PEBs and can be improved by increasing their perceived job performance (PJP). Additionally, this paper argues that PJP can affect employees' PEBs through OI. In the context of the positivism research philosophy, the current study utilized a survey method to collect data from employees working in Chinese hotels and performed ordinary least squares (OLS) regression analysis to test the proposed hypotheses, which were all supported empirically.
ISSN:0278-4319
1873-4693
DOI:10.1016/j.ijhm.2020.102632