How Leaders Drive Followers’ Unethical Behavior

Numerous organizational scandals have implicated leaders in encouraging employees to advance organizational objectives through unethical means. However, leadership research has not examined leaders’ encouragement of unethical behaviors. We define leader immorality encouragement (LIE) as an employee&...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of management 2023-09, Vol.49 (7), p.2318-2353
Hauptverfasser: Mesdaghinia, Salar, Eisenberger, Robert, Wen, Xueqi, Liu, Zihan, Lewis, Blaine A., Qiu, Feng, Shapiro, Debra L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Numerous organizational scandals have implicated leaders in encouraging employees to advance organizational objectives through unethical means. However, leadership research has not examined leaders’ encouragement of unethical behaviors. We define leader immorality encouragement (LIE) as an employee's perception that their leader encourages unethical behaviors on behalf of the organization. Across four studies, we found, as hypothesized, that (1) LIE promotes employees’ unethical behavior carried out with the intention to aid the organization (unethical pro-organizational behavior); (2) this relationship is mediated by employees’ moral disengagement and the expectation of rewards; (3) LIE, via moral disengagement, enhances employees’ self-serving unethical behavior; and (4) the relationship between LIE and unethical behavior is stronger when the leader has a higher quality exchange relationship with the employee and is perceived by the employee as having higher organizational status. Our set of findings contributes to an understanding of leaders’ attempts to further organization objectives by encouraging the unethical behavior of subordinates.
ISSN:0149-2063
1557-1211
DOI:10.1177/01492063221104031