Abstract:
Organizational justice has been preferred for its instrumental, relational and deontic approaches.
It is a lens through which employees gather important information about the allocation of
resources, interpersonal treatment, organizational procedures and eventually frame cognitive as
well as emotional reactions. However, the existing literature is more focused on the distal
attitudinal and behavioral outcomes but less attentive to underlying proximal motivations.
On basis of extant literature review and arguments grounded in the Social information
Processing theory, Social Identity Theory and Conservation of Resources Theory, this study
identifies that Self-Concepts (Individual, Relational and Collective) and Psychological Capital
act as explanatory mechanism for the influence of organizational justice on job satisfaction, job
performance, turnover intentions, OCBI and OCBO. This research model expands the scope of
organizational justice research and views it as a social context between organization and
employees that leads him/her to feel satisfied with their jobs, deliver good performance, stay
with their organizations and display discretionary behaviors. But the influence of organizational
justice on job Performance, job satisfaction, OCBO, OCBI, Turnover Intentions is not direct: in
this process the employee takes cue from the fairness conditions and formulates his/her relational
self-concept as well as Psychological Capital capabilities. Thus relational self-concept fully
mediates between interactional justice and job performance, OCBI while partially mediates
between Interactional justice and Job Satisfaction as well as OCBO. Furthermore, Psychological
Capital partially mediates between Interactional Justice and Turnover Intentions, OCBO while it
fully mediates between Interactional Justice and Job Performance, OCBI.
Main objective of this study was to test a theoretical and structural model that hypothesizes
mediation of tripartite self-concepts and Psychological Capital in the influence of Organizational
justice on job satisfaction, job performance, OCBO, OCBI and Turnover Intentions. In addition,
this study also identified direct relations between the study variables; of these the influence of
interactional justice on both Psychological Capital and Relational self-concepts are important
hypotheses, because there is almost no literature available in this context.
A survey based methodology was used to test the model; standardized scales were used as
measures for the twelve study variables. A pilot study was conducted to test the scale properties.
viiA sample of 518 employees was drawn from the education, Telecommunication sector, oil and
gas sectors. The model was tested by following the steps of Structural Equation Modelling.
The findings of this study advance available knowledge on the selected job outcomes and
provide impetus to research in this domain by identifying relational self-concept and
Psychological Capital as intervening variables. The study thus extends the application of both
relational self-concept and Psychological Capital as organizational variables capable of
translating the effects of interactional justice on these five job outcomes.
Key words: Interactional Justice, Psychological Capital, Self-Concepts, Job Satisfaction, OCBO,
Organizational Justice.