Abstract

Organizational climate and organization culture can be some of the leading factors in hindering knowledge sharing within the organization. It is generally accepted that successful knowledge management practice, including knowledge sharing, comes as a result of a conducive and knowledge sharing friendly environment. Organizations that promote and reward collective work generate a trustful and a more collaborative learning culture. The perception of fairness in an organization has been considered an important indicator of employee behavior, attitude, and motivation. This study investigates organizational justice perception and its impact on knowledge sharing practices among forensic experts in the Turkish National Police. The study findings revealed that senior officers, who are experts in the field, have the strongest organizational justice perception. Meanwhile, noncommissioned officers or technicians bear positive but comparatively weaker feelings about the existence of justice within the organization. The study argues that those who satisfy their career expectations tend to have a higher organizational justice perception.

Highlights

  • In today’s increasingly competitive world economy, knowledge is considered a key factor in gaining competitive advantage and managing intellectual capital for both public and private organizations

  • Intention to share knowledge is an individual behavior that is defined as willingness to share one’s knowledge with others within an organization through its repositories, processes, and practices (Bock et al, 2005)

  • Effective knowledge sharing is possible when the parties involved believe that outcomes are distributed fairly and procedures for performance evaluation are conducted justly

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Summary

Introduction

In today’s increasingly competitive world economy, knowledge is considered a key factor in gaining competitive advantage and managing intellectual capital for both public and private organizations. Under this license, authors reserve the copyright for their content; they permit anyone to unrestrictedly use, distribute, and reproduce the content in any medium as far as the original authors and source are cited. The development and transformation of individual knowledge and expertise into organizational knowledge requires heavy investment in people and human capital. It requires investment in the processes and practices that enable organizations to identify and manage the knowledge resources and intellectual capital

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