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Scrooge Posing as Mother Teresa: How Hypocritical Social Responsibility Strategies Hurt Employees and Firms

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TLDR
In this article, the effects of inconsistent external-internal CSR strategies on employee attitudes, intentions, and behaviors are examined. And the authors take a social and moral identification theory view and demonstrate the importance of taking into account the interests of both external and internal stakeholders of the firm when researching and managing CSR.
Abstract
Extant research provides compelling conceptual and empirical arguments that company-external (e.g., philanthropic) as well as company-internal (i.e., employee-directed) CSR efforts positively affect employees, but does so largely in studies assessing effects from the two CSR types independently of each other. In contrast, this paper investigates external–internal CSR jointly, examining the effects of (in)consistent external–internal CSR strategies on employee attitudes, intentions, and behaviors. The research takes a social and moral identification theory view and advances the core hypothesis that inconsistent CSR strategies, defined as favoring external over internal stakeholders, trigger employees’ perceptions of corporate hypocrisy which, in turn, lead to emotional exhaustion and turnover. In Study 1, a cross-industry employee survey (n = 3410) indicates that inconsistent CSR strategies with larger external than internal efforts increase employees’ turnover intentions via perceived corporate hypocrisy and emotional exhaustion. In Study 2, a multi-source secondary dataset (n = 1902) demonstrates that inconsistent CSR strategies increase firms’ actual employee turnover. Combined, the two studies demonstrate the importance of taking into account the interests of both external and internal stakeholders of the firm when researching and managing CSR.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Employees' response to corporate greenwashing

TL;DR: The authors investigated the effect of corporate greenwashing on employees and found that greenwashing was positively related to perceptions of corporate hypocrisy, which in turn resulted in higher turnover intentions, and that these relationships were moderated by employees' level of environmental education.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Temporal Order of Inconsistent CSR Information Affects Consumer Perceptions

Juhua Xu, +1 more
- 13 Apr 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of inconsistent information on consumer perceptions of corporate social responsibility, including cognitive dissonance, perceived corporate hypocrisy, and perceived corporate reputation, and found that consumers experience more corporate hypocrisy when exposed to a CSR initiative and then to a crisis than when the order is reversed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of (in)congruence modes between supervisor prescriptive and descriptive norms on employee green behavior

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the congruence/incongruence between supervisor prescriptive and descriptive norms of EGB and found that the relationship between the two norms has a positive relationship on voluntary and required EGB through employee promotion/prevention focus.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effect of Chief Executive Officer and Board Prior Corporate Social Responsibility Experiences on Their Focal Firm’s Corporate Social Responsibility: The Moderating Effect of Chief Executive Officer Overconfidence

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examine how the prior experiences of the chief executive officer and board influence the focal firm's Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities and find a significant positive moderating effect of CEO overconfidence on the relationship between CEO prior CSR and the focal firms' CSR activities.
References
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TL;DR: Ajzen, 1985, 1987, this article reviewed the theory of planned behavior and some unresolved issues and concluded that the theory is well supported by empirical evidence and that intention to perform behaviors of different kinds can be predicted with high accuracy from attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control; and these intentions, together with perceptions of behavioral control, account for considerable variance in actual behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating Structural Equation Models with Unobservable Variables and Measurement Error

TL;DR: In this paper, the statistical tests used in the analysis of structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error are examined, and a drawback of the commonly applied chi square test, in additit...
Book ChapterDOI

The social identity theory of intergroup behavior

TL;DR: A theory of intergroup conflict and some preliminary data relating to the theory is presented in this article. But the analysis is limited to the case where the salient dimensions of the intergroup differentiation are those involving scarce resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Reports in Organizational Research: Problems and Prospects

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify six categories of self-reports and discuss such problems as common method variance, the consistency motif, and social desirability, as well as statistical and post hoc remedies and some procedural methods for dealing with artifactual bias.
Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of experienced burnout

TL;DR: A scale designed to assess various aspects of the burnout syndrome was administered to a wide range of human services professionals as discussed by the authors, and three subscales emerged from the data analysis: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal accomplishment.
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