TY - JOUR
T1 - Political skill and self-serving counterproductive work behaviors
T2 - Moderating role of perceptions of organizational politics
AU - Zahid, Fariha
AU - Butt, Arif Nazir
AU - Khan, Abdul Karim
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 2019.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The scholarship on political skill documents that it is a social savvy, personal style construct, associated with positive personal and organizational outcomes. However, this study takes a counterintuitive view and demonstrates that despite being a positive resource, political skill also has the potential to be used as a self-serving device to achieve one's personal agendas in the form of self-serving counterproductive work behaviors. Borrowing insights from the trait activation theory, this study demonstrates that a context, high in political perceptions, acts as an incentivized condition for politically skilled people to execute its dark side. The results supported the hypothesis and revealed that under high perceptions of organizational politics, political skill will have a significant, positive relation with self-serving counterproductive work behaviors. The study discusses important theoretical and practical implications of these results and extends the domains of political skill and counterproductive work behaviors.
AB - The scholarship on political skill documents that it is a social savvy, personal style construct, associated with positive personal and organizational outcomes. However, this study takes a counterintuitive view and demonstrates that despite being a positive resource, political skill also has the potential to be used as a self-serving device to achieve one's personal agendas in the form of self-serving counterproductive work behaviors. Borrowing insights from the trait activation theory, this study demonstrates that a context, high in political perceptions, acts as an incentivized condition for politically skilled people to execute its dark side. The results supported the hypothesis and revealed that under high perceptions of organizational politics, political skill will have a significant, positive relation with self-serving counterproductive work behaviors. The study discusses important theoretical and practical implications of these results and extends the domains of political skill and counterproductive work behaviors.
KW - Asia
KW - organizational behavior
KW - power and politics
KW - quantitative methods
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U2 - 10.1017/jmo.2019.66
DO - 10.1017/jmo.2019.66
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85072522220
SN - 1833-3672
JO - Journal of Management and Organization
JF - Journal of Management and Organization
ER -