Keeping anger in check: The role of personal and organizational characteristics on behavioral outcomes Article

Moreo, A, Cain, L, Chang, W. (2020). Keeping anger in check: The role of personal and organizational characteristics on behavioral outcomes . 23(6), 520-545. 10.1080/15378020.2020.1803688

cited authors

  • Moreo, A; Cain, L; Chang, W

abstract

  • The food and beverage sector of the hospitality industry is known for being an emotionally labor-intensive environment. The events that transpire over the course of a shift lead to various emotions, which ultimately dictate the behaviors of the employees working in this industry. Of particular interest to this study was the interplay between environmental antecedents (power and distributive justice) and their influence on a negative emotion (anger) and a positive emotion (affective organizational commitment). Additionally, this study sought to understand how anger and affective organizational commitment influenced positive (organizational citizenship behavior) and negative (counterproductive work behavior) workplace behaviors using the lens of the affective events theory. The results of this study revealed that anger had the strongest effect on counterproductive work behavior and that all of the relationships were significant except from anger to affective organizational commitment and affective organizational commitment to counterproductive work behavior.

publication date

  • November 1, 2020

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 520

end page

  • 545

volume

  • 23

issue

  • 6