TY - JOUR
T1 - Despotic Leadership and Front-Line Employee Deviant Work Behaviors in Service Organizations
T2 - The Roles of Moral Disengagement and Moral Identity
AU - Akhtar, Muhammad Waheed
AU - Garavan, Thomas
AU - Syed, Fauzia
AU - Huo, Chunhui
AU - Javed, Muzhar
AU - O’Brien, Fergal
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Research on despotic leadership and its impacts on the behavior of front-line employees (FLE) in service organizations is nascent. Drawing on the social cognitive theory of morality, we develop and test a model in two service settings investigating the direct and indirect effects of despotic leadership on three FLE deviant work behaviors. In Study 1, using a multi-wave, multi-data source research design with data derived from banks, telecommunications, and training/education service organizations in Pakistan, we demonstrate the ecological validity of our constructs. In Study 2, using a multi-wave, multi-source longitudinal research design, we investigated these relationships in hotels located in Pakistan and confirmed the results found in Study 1 and also investigated the sustainability of deviant work outcomes. Cumulatively, we found support for the direct effects of despotic leadership on FLE deviant work behaviors. Moral disengagement acted as a partial mediator of these relationships and moral identity moderated the mediated relationship between despotic leadership and FLE deviant work behaviors via moral disengagement. Our findings provide a nuanced understanding of despotic leadership and FLE deviant work behaviors in service settings. We contribute to the front-line services literature stream by focusing on the supervisor and FLE interaction and highlighting research and practice implications.
AB - Research on despotic leadership and its impacts on the behavior of front-line employees (FLE) in service organizations is nascent. Drawing on the social cognitive theory of morality, we develop and test a model in two service settings investigating the direct and indirect effects of despotic leadership on three FLE deviant work behaviors. In Study 1, using a multi-wave, multi-data source research design with data derived from banks, telecommunications, and training/education service organizations in Pakistan, we demonstrate the ecological validity of our constructs. In Study 2, using a multi-wave, multi-source longitudinal research design, we investigated these relationships in hotels located in Pakistan and confirmed the results found in Study 1 and also investigated the sustainability of deviant work outcomes. Cumulatively, we found support for the direct effects of despotic leadership on FLE deviant work behaviors. Moral disengagement acted as a partial mediator of these relationships and moral identity moderated the mediated relationship between despotic leadership and FLE deviant work behaviors via moral disengagement. Our findings provide a nuanced understanding of despotic leadership and FLE deviant work behaviors in service settings. We contribute to the front-line services literature stream by focusing on the supervisor and FLE interaction and highlighting research and practice implications.
KW - despotic leadership
KW - moral disengagement
KW - moral identity
KW - negative workplace gossip
KW - retaliation
KW - unethical work behavior
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85175012237&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/10946705231207991
DO - 10.1177/10946705231207991
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85175012237
SN - 1094-6705
VL - 27
SP - 600
EP - 616
JO - Journal of Service Research
JF - Journal of Service Research
IS - 4
ER -