SUPERVISORS' SELF-PERCEIVED SOCIAL CLASS AND ETHICS: A Cross-Cultural Analysis

Published: Jan 1, 2015
Abstract
We employed Robert Merton’s anomie theory to examine supervisors’ ethics. We examined whether supervisors with a lower self-perceived social class are more likely to justify ethically suspect behaviors than are those with a higher self-perceived social class and whether cultural values influence this individual-level association. The results did not show that supervisors’ self-perceived social class is able to predict their ethics. However,...
Paper Details
Title
SUPERVISORS' SELF-PERCEIVED SOCIAL CLASS AND ETHICS: A Cross-Cultural Analysis
Published Date
Jan 1, 2015
Journal
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