The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of the organizational justice variable, organizational commitment, job satisfaction on the sustainable organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) variable in food producers. A cross-sectional, self-administered questionnaire was distributed in this study, the sample was determined using a slovin approach, and the total number of respondents was 159. The structural equation modeling (SEM) software SmartPLS 3.3.3 was used as the analytical tool. Data for research was gathered through the distribution of online questionnaires. According to the findings of this study, organizational justice variables have a positive and significant impact on the OCB variable. This demonstrates that the higher the organizational justice variable given to food producers in Banten, the higher the employee's sustainable Organizational citizenship Behavior variable will be. The organizational commitment variable influences the OCB variable in a positive and significant way. This indicates that the higher the level of the employee's sustainable OCB variable, the higher the level of the employee's organizational commitment. Furthermore, job satisfaction has a positive and significant impact on long-term OCB. This shows that the higher the employee's job satisfaction, the higher the employee's sustainable Organizational citizenship Behavior variable will be.
CITATION STYLE
Juliana, Pramezwary, A., Lemy, D. M., Pramono, R., Situmorang, J. M. H., & Djakasaputra, A. (2022). What Drives Sustainable Organizational Citizenship Behavior. International Journal of Sustainable Development and Planning, 17(5), 1403–1410. https://doi.org/10.18280/ijsdp.170503
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