organisational

justice




justice




"Justice, sir, is the greatest interest of man on earth."

                                                                  - Daniel Webster




Justice (or fairness) refers to the idea that

an action or decision is morally right. 



organisational justice

what is it ?






Personal evaluation about ethical and moral
standing of managerial standards




organisational justice

evolution





Adam's Equity theory of Motivation

(1963, 1965)





Judgement of equity are derived from comparisons between one's self and others based on 

inputs & outcomes



INPUT
Refers to what a person perceives to contribute
eg: knowledge and effort

OUTCOMES
What an individual perceives to get out of an exchange relationship
eg: pay and recognition



INTRODUCTION TO

CASE STUDY


STORY OF ARUN, A SOFTWARE DEVELOPER


STARTUP


Team is exceptional
All members are professional and experienced developers
They work at a breakneck speed

STARTUP


  • Arun joins the team
  • He is assigned a sub project
  • He is given a documentation file which lists all the expected features in the finished project and how the features should work

COMPANY



Arun joins a company
Company is renowned but doesn't pay very well. 
His team members are his college mates and his boss is two years senior to him. 

COMPANY



  • Arun is assigned a project and provided with a documentation.
  • He is asked to evaluate and resubmit the documentation along with suggestions for other features.
  • His suggestions are discussed with him and added to the official documentation.



Types OF

ORGANISATIONAL JUSTICE



procedural justice

Appropriateness of allocation process
Consistency | Lack of Bias | Accuracy | Correction | Ethics

Leventhan (1980)

The Fair Process effect



distributive justice

Appropriateness of outcome
Equity | Equality | Need



interactional justice

Appropriateness of treatment from authority
Interpersonal | Informational

Colquitt (2001)


WHY JUSTICE

MATTERS TO PEOPLE




LONG RANGE BENEFITS

People are often motivated by economic and quasi-economic interests




SOCIAL CONSIDERATIONS

Just treatment tells us that we are respected and esteemed by the larger group




ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS

When individuals witness an event they believe is ethically inappropriate, they are likely to take considerable risks in the hopes of extracting retribution 



ORGANISATIONAL JUSTICE

PERCEPTIONS



EMPLOYEE PARTICIPATION

The opportunity to participate in decision making improves an individual’s perceptions of procedural justice, even when the decision is unfavorable to the individual 
(Bies & Shapiro, 1988)



leadership

In just environment, decisions taken by leaders
reflect fair treatment of people.
(B. Charles Tatum, 2003)



communication

It is important that information provided be accurate, timely and helpful to impact perceptions of justice.
(Schweiger & Denisi, 1991)



justice climate

Researches show members learn justice evaluation from other team members.
(Roberson & Colquitt, 2005)



organizational justice

outcomes





trust on supervisor

A positive relationship between an employee and supervisor can lead to trust in the organization
(Hubbell & Chory-Assad, 2005)



performance

Improving justice perceptions improves
 productivity and performance.
 (Karriker & Williams, 2009)



job satisfaction

It was found to be positively associated 
with overall perceptions of organizational justice.
 (Cohen- Charash & Spector, 2001)



organisational citizenship behavior

Actions that employee takes to support the organization
 that go above and beyond the scope of their job description.
 (Karriker & Williams, 2009)



counterproductive work behavior

Increased judgments of procedural injustice, for instance
 can lead to employee unwillingness to comply
 with an organization's rules.
(Cohen- Chatash & Spector, 2001)



absenteeism & withdrawal

Failure to receive a promotion is an example of a situation in which feeling of injustice may result in an employee being absent from work without reason. 
(Johns,2001)  



emotional exhaustion

As perceptions of justice increase
 employee health increases. 
(Liljegren & Ekberg, 2009)



ORGANIZATIONAL JUSTICE

CASE STUDY





Experience of a software developer, Arun, at a
STARTUP vs COMPANY



STARTUP

Team is exceptional
All members are professional and experienced developers
They work at a breakneck speed

STARTUP



  • Arun joins the team
  • He is assigned a sub project
  • He is given a documentation file which lists all the expected features in the finished project and how the features should work

STARTUP



  • Arun gets stuck on a particular issue and asks a senior for help. The senior mails him the software code solution for the problem by the end of the day
  • He has no idea what others are working on

COMPANY




Arun joins a company
Company is renowned but doesn't pay very well. 
His team members are his college mates and his boss is two years senior to him. 

    COMPANY



    • Arun is assigned a project and provided with a documentation.
    • He is asked to evaluate and resubmit the documentation along with suggestions for other features.
    • His suggestions are discussed with him and added to the official documentation.

    COMPANY



    • When Arun got stuck on a particular feature, his boss sat down with him and helped him figure out the problem.
    • His boss also sends a daily mail with status of everyone's projects and also provides feedback on the progress.



    DIFFERENCES


    PAY | QUALITY OF WORK | INTERACTION | SPEED OF ITERATION

    PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT

    PROBLEMS AT THE STARTUP


    • No participation of employees
    • Reduction in Productivity, Creativity, Innovation, Ideas and Commitment
    • No smooth communication between Boss and his team members.
    • No external motivation
    • There was no feedback for personal growth

    MISSING


    Procedural Justice
    Communication
    Job Satisfaction
    Organisational Citizenship Behaviour
    Counterproductive work behaviors



    SOLUTION TO

    ORGANISATIONAL JUSTICE





  • Allow workers to voice their opinions
  • Include them in decision making
  • Do not ever belittle your subordinates
  • Follow open and fair procedures
  • Allow and promote personal growth of employees


  • CONCLUSION

    ORGANISATIONAL JUSTICE


    THANK YOU

    Suraj Kumar Sau

    Vijay Jain

    Rajat Srivastava

    Manush Gupta

    Shashank Mehta


    \m/

    Organizational Justice

    By shashankm

    Organizational Justice

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