Abstract

Deviant behaviors manifest in many organizations and all occupations. Deviant behaviors in the workplace may originate from organizational norms and proclivities for self-benefit. The organizational culture influences employees’ attitudes. Employees internalize the organizational culture, which transforms their personal attitudes and influences their positive and negative behaviors towards the organization. This study explores the key factors affecting deviant workplace behaviors based on various dimensions such as organizational deviance, interpersonal deviance, leader-member exchange, and corporate culture. The multiple-criteria decision-making analysis method was applied and dimensions developed based on scale factors devised in previous literature. The opinions of experts from industry, the government, and academia were examined. The affecting factors were then weighed and ordered according to their importance. According to the research results, among the key factors affecting deviant workplace behavior, the organizational deviance variable of production deviance has the most significant impact on organizational development. The second most significant factor was anti-organizational behavior, a variable of interpersonal deviance, followed by members’ behavior and attribution, a leader-member exchange variable. Businesses are advised to formulate rules that prohibit organizational deviance, while building a supportive organizational culture and enhancing positivity in the workplace to reduce deviant behavior. Key words: Leader-member exchange, corporate culture, organizational deviance. &nbsp

Highlights

  • Deviant behaviors manifest in many organizations and all occupations

  • This study explores the key factors affecting deviant workplace behaviors based on various dimensions such as organizational deviance, interpersonal deviance, leader-member exchange, and corporate culture

  • The multiple-criteria decision-making analysis method was applied and dimensions developed based on scale factors devised in previous literature

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Deviant behaviors manifest in many organizations and all occupations. Their prevalence in public organizations may be detrimental to the government and public (Estes and Wang, 2008). Leader-member exchanges (LMX) are established when leaders treat in-group and out-group members differently, forming different types of relationships with subordinates (Graen and Cashman, 1975) This exchange, whether positive or negative, affects subordinates’ deviant workplace behaviors, which is harmful to the organization (Harper, 1990). Out-group members Formal relationship Low level of loyalty Employment relationship with leaders Greater distrust in leaders Top-down relationship Low-quality exchange Formal relationship Lower level of mutual trust and respect Lower level of interdependence Considered outsiders international academia, mainly American scholars, in recent years This is why these studies are mostly based on the Chinese experience (Chi, 2017). Anonymous questionnaires allow for participants’ full cooperation and gather data with high validity (Dunlop and Lee, 2004; Johnson and Klee, 2007)

LITERATURE REVIEW
Perception of situational factors
Leaders’ response
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Full Text
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