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      Moral leadership and employee workplace incivility: The roles of moral tolerance and leader trustworthiness

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          Abstract

          Drawing on social information processing theory, we conducted a crosssectional study to explore how moral leadership affects employees' workplace incivility. We tested our theoretical model with a sample of 427 employees of a Chinese textile processing company and 88 of their immediate leaders. The results indicate that moral leadership was negatively related to employees' workplace incivility, and moral tolerance partially mediated the relationship between moral leadership and workplace incivility. Furthermore, a high level of perceived leader trustworthiness amplified the negative impact of moral leadership on both employees' moral tolerance and workplace incivility. This study will help organizations to understand how moral leadership affects employees' workplace incivility and guide the managers to take effective measures to deal with such behaviors.

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          Most cited references24

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          NOT SO DIFFERENT AFTER ALL: A CROSS-DISCIPLINE VIEW OF TRUST.

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            Ethical leadership: A social learning perspective for construct development and testing

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              A social information processing approach to job attitudes and task design.

              This article outlines a social information processing approach to explain job attitudes. In comparison with need-satisfaction and expectancy models to job attitudes and motivation, the social information processing perspective emphasizes the effects of context and the consequences of past choices, rather than individual predispositions and rational decision-making processes. When an individual develops statements about attitude or needs, he or she uses social information--information about past behavior and about what others think. The process of attributing attitudes or needs from behavior is itself affected by commitment processes, by the saliency and relevance of information, and by the need to develop socially acceptable and legitimate rationalizations for actions. Both attitudes and need statements, as well as characterizations of jobs, are affected by informational social influence. The implications of the social information processing perspective for organization development efforts and programs of job redesign are discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal
                soc behav pers
                Scientific Journal Publishers Ltd
                0301-2212
                August 03 2022
                August 03 2022
                : 50
                : 8
                : 1-13
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Economics and Management, Beijing Jiaotong University, People's Republic of China
                [2 ]School of Business, Qingdao University, People's Republic of China
                [3 ]3School of Economics & Management, University of Science and Technology Beijing, People's Republic of China
                [4 ]4Qingdao No.2 Middle School of Shandong Province, People's Republic of China
                Article
                10.2224/sbp.11785
                1e62f086-ec1b-48e5-ad0e-5b5996cdd5a7
                © 2022
                History

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