Abstract

This study aims to determine and examine the effect of self-monitoring as a mediator of the relationship between procedural justice and distributive justice on organizational commitment at BPJS Ketenagakerjaan Aceh. The population of this study was all employees of BPJS Ketenagakerjaan Aceh totaling 101 people. Samples were taken by the census technique. The research model was analyzed using Structural Equation Modelling. Data was collected using a questionnaire circulated through Google Forms and measured using a Likert scale. The results of the descriptive hypothesis testing prove that procedural justice, distributive justice, selfmonitoring, and organizational commitment in BPJS Ketenagakerjaan Aceh have gone well. The results of direct hypothesis testing prove that procedural justice and distributive justice affect organizational commitment, procedural justice, and distributive justice affect selfmonitoring, self-monitoring affects organizational commitment, and self-monitoring significantly mediates the relationship between Procedural Justice and distributive justice to organizational commitment. These results also prove that self-monitoring acts as a partial mediator.

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