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The Journal of Positive Psychology
Dedicated to furthering research and promoting good practice
Volume 8, 2013 - Issue 4
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Articles

Authenticity, employee silence, prohibitive voice, and the moderating effect of organizational identification

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Pages 346-360 | Received 03 Sep 2012, Accepted 05 May 2013, Published online: 12 Jun 2013
 

Abstract

Authenticity is an important concept in positive psychology and has been shown to be related to well-being, health, and leadership effectiveness. The present paper introduces employee authenticity as a predictor of relevant workplace behaviors, namely employee silence and prohibitive voice. Converging evidence across two studies using cross-sectional and longitudinal designs demonstrates that when responding to hypothetical problematic workplace events (Study 1) or actual workplace experiences (Study 2), individual differences in employees’ authenticity predicted more self-reported voice behaviors and less silence that emanated from various motivations. Furthermore, authenticity scores consistently yielded predictive utility over and above the contribution of a broad set of individual and organization-based characteristics. Finally, organizational identification moderated the relation between authenticity and silence, such that for employees with high levels of identification, the relation between authenticity and silence was stronger.

Acknowledgments

We thank Oliver Weigelt and Bernd Marcus for their help with the data collection.

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