Self-categorization, affective commitment and group self-esteem as distinct aspects of social identity in the organization

被引:1072
作者
Bergami, M
Bagozzi, RP
机构
[1] Rice Univ, Grad Sch Management, Houston, TX 77005 USA
[2] Univ Bologna, I-40126 Bologna, Italy
关键词
D O I
10.1348/014466600164633
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The purpose of this study is to distinguish between cognitive, affective and evaluative components of social identity in the organization and to show how the components instigate behaviours that benefit in-group members. A new scale for measuring cognitive organizational identification (i.e. self-categorization) is developed and compared to a leading scale. Internal consistency, convergent validity, predictive validity and generalizability of the two scales are established on a sample of Italian (N = 409) and Korean (N = 283) workers. Next, convergent and discriminant validity for measures of organizational identification, affective commitment and group self-esteem are demonstrated. Then, two antecedents of these components of social identity are examined: organization prestige and organization stereotypes. Finally, the mediating role of the components of social identity are investigated between the antecedents and bye forms of citizenship behaviours. The last three analyses are performed on the Italian (N = 409) workers. Among other findings, the results show that affective commitment and self-esteem are the primary motivators of citizenship behaviours. Moreover, cognitive identification performs as a central mediator between prestige and stereotypes on the one hand, and affective commitment and self-esteem on the other. Identification is thus an indirect determinant of citizenship behaviours.
引用
收藏
页码:555 / 577
页数:23
相关论文
共 72 条
[41]  
Lazarus RS, 1991, EMOTION ADAPTATION
[42]  
LONG K, 1997, SOCIAL PSYCHOL STERE, P296
[43]   A COLLECTIVE SELF-ESTEEM SCALE - SELF-EVALUATION OF ONES SOCIAL IDENTITY [J].
LUHTANEN, R ;
CROCKER, J .
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 1992, 18 (03) :302-318
[44]   ALUMNI AND THEIR ALMA-MATER - A PARTIAL TEST OF THE REFORMULATED MODEL OF ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTIFICATION [J].
MAEL, F ;
ASHFORTH, BE .
JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 1992, 13 (02) :103-123
[45]  
Mael F.A., 1988, Organizational identification: Construction redefinition a field application with organizational alumni
[46]   IDENTIFYING ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTIFICATION [J].
MAEL, FA ;
TETRICK, LE .
EDUCATIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT, 1992, 52 (04) :813-824
[47]   LOYAL FROM DAY ONE - BIODATA, ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTIFICATION, AND TURNOVER AMONG NEWCOMERS [J].
MAEL, FA ;
ASHFORTH, BE .
PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, 1995, 48 (02) :309-333
[48]   CULTURE AND THE SELF - IMPLICATIONS FOR COGNITION, EMOTION, AND MOTIVATION [J].
MARKUS, HR ;
KITAYAMA, S .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1991, 98 (02) :224-253
[49]  
Marsh H.W., 1996, Advanced Structural Equation Modeling: Issues and Techniques, P315
[50]   Confirmatory Factor Analysis Models of Factorial Invariance: A Multifaceted Approach [J].
Marsh, Herbert W. .
STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING-A MULTIDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL, 1994, 1 (01) :5-34