Trust in the employer: the role of high-involvement work practices and procedural justice in European organizations
Searle, Rosalind ; Den Hartog, Deanne N. ; Weibel, Antoinette ; Gillespie, Nicole ; Six, Frederique ; Hatzakis, Tally ; Skinner, Denise
International Journal of Human Resource Management
2011
22
5
March
1069-1092
employees attitude ; human resources management ; labour law
Personnel management
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2011.556782
English
Bibliogr.
"Despite the central role of trust in the organizational sciences, we know little about what makes people trust the organizations they work for. This paper examines the antecedents of employees' trust in their organizations drawing on survey data from over 600 European professional workers and managers. The results revealed direct as well as indirect relationships of both human resource (HR) practices and procedural justice with trust. The relationships of both HR practices and procedural justice with trust were partially mediated by perceptions of organizational trustworthiness (in terms of perceived ability and trustworthy intentions of the organization). Justice and HR practices were also found to interact such that justice forms a stronger predictor of trust in organizations when HR practices are less developed. In addition, employees' dispositional propensity to trust explained significant variance in employee trust in their organization, even when it was controlled in our analysis. The implications of these findings for research and practice are discussed."
Paper
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