Abstract:
At some instances, employees raise their voice while in other circumstances they remain silent.
These behaviors affect task and non-task performance of employees. The purpose of this study is
to evaluate how organizational silence and voice effect the ability of employees in displaying
organizational citizenship and counterproductive work behavior. Furthermore, literature shows
that organizational identification plays an important role in determining organizational non-task
performance. To evaluate this phenomenon moderation effect of organizational identification
were analyzed on the relationships of organizational silence and voice with organizational
citizenship and counterproductive behaviors. The moderation effects were also analyzed between
motives based sub-dimensions of organizational voice and silence, and individual and
organizational based sub-dimensions of organizational citizenship and counterproductive work
behaviors. This study was conducted on academic faculty of three public sector universities of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan selected based on their respective organizational lifecycle stages.
Results of the study show that organizational silence and voice negatively effects the
ability of employees in displaying helpful non-task behaviors i.e. organizational citizenship
behaviors. In contrast, they strengthen the display of harmful behaviors in employees i.e.
counterproductive work behavior. The withdrawal and defensive motive based silence and voice
has a negative relationship with organizational citizenship behavior and a positive relationship
with counterproductive work behavior, while the prosocial motive based silence and voice
promotes organizational citizenship behavior and prevents employee to display
counterproductive work behaviors. Interestingly positive behaviors directed towards individual
(OCBI) are also amplified with withdrawal and defensive motive based silence and voice while
repressed by prosocial motive based of silence and voice.
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Organizational identification was found positively related with organizational citizenship
behavior while negatively related with counterproductive work behavior, organizational silence
and organizational voice. When employed as a moderating variable the analyses resulted in four
primary models. In model 1 and 2, organizational identification strengthened the negative
relationship of organizational silence and voice with organizational citizenship behavior. On the
contrary, in model 3 and 4 organizational identification dampens the positive relationship of
organizational silence and voice with counterproductive work behaviors. Relationships between
the sub-dimensions of the dependent and independent variables were also tested for the
moderation effects of organizational identification resulting in 24 secondary models displaying
varied results.
This study provides an insight into the relationships between the variables of social
exchange theory and the impact of different levels of identification on these relationships. In this
study for the first time organizational silence, voice, citizenship, counterproductive work
behaviors and organizational identification were studied together in a mutual relationship.
Furthermore, literature is scarce about the said variables being investigated under the
methodology employed in this study. Finally, these relationships have been tested at second level
analysis by presenting and reporting relationship between the sub-dimensions of the variables.
This study hence not only provides a detailed and comprehensive investigation and managerial
implication itself but also encourages further wide-ranging investigations into the dynamic
interconnections of voice, silence, citizenship and counterproductive behaviors.