Relationship of organizational citizenship behavior and production deviance: Role of perceived organizational politics

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Abstract

The present study was an endeavor to extend the literature of perceived organizational politics by examining its moderating role between the relationship of organizational citizenship behavior and production deviance. Organizational Citizenship Behavior Scale (Mackenzie, Podsakoff, & Paine, 1999), Production Deviance subscale of Counterproductive Work Behavior Checklist-32 (Spector et al., 2006), and Perception of Organizational Politics Scale (Kacmar & Carlson, 1997) were used in present study. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that low levels of perceived organizational politics moderated the relationship between courtesy and production deviance by strengthening the negative relationship of these behaviors while perceived organizational politics did not act as a moderator for the relationship of civic virtue and conscientiousness with production deviance. High level of go-along-to-get-ahead as a moderator strengthened the relationship of civic virtue and conscientiousness with production deviance and its low level was found to be moderating the relationship between courtesy and production deviance. Future implications of the study were also discussed.

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Makhdoom, I. F., Atta, M., & Malik, N. I. (2019). Relationship of organizational citizenship behavior and production deviance: Role of perceived organizational politics. Pakistan Journal of Psychological Research, 34(2), 367–382. https://doi.org/10.33824/PJPR.2019.34.2.20

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