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How and when voluntary citizenship behaviour towards individuals triggers vicious knowledge hiding: the roles of moral licensing and the mastery climate

Peixu He (Business School, Huaqiao University, Quanzhou, China)
Amitabh Anand (Excelia Business School, La Rochelle, France and Strategic Management Lab, Aalborg University Business School, Aalborg, Denmark)
Mengying Wu (College of Philosophy, Law and Political Science, Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai, China)
Cuiling Jiang (Department of Management, Kedge Business School - Bordeaux Campus, Talence, France)
Qing Xia (Business School, Xiangtan University, Xiangtan, China)

Journal of Knowledge Management

ISSN: 1367-3270

Article publication date: 11 January 2023

Issue publication date: 19 October 2023

998

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate how voluntary citizenship behaviour towards an individual (VCB-I) is linked with vicious knowledge hiding (VKH), and why members, within a mastery climate, tend to participate in less VKH after their engaging in VCB-I. The authors, according to the moral licensing theory, propose that moral licensing mediates the relationship between VCB-I and VKH, and that a mastery climate weakens the hypothesised link via moral licensing.

Design/methodology/approach

This study surveys 455 valid matching samples of subordinates and supervisors from 77 working teams in China at two time points and explores the relationship between VCB and VKH, as well as the underlying mechanism. A confirmatory factor analysis, bootstrapping method and hierarchical linear model were used to validate the research hypotheses.

Findings

The results show that VCB-I has a significant positive effect on VKH; moral credentials play a mediating role in the relationship between VCB-I and VKH; and the mastery climate moderates the positive effect of moral credentials on VKH and the mediating effect of moral credentials. In a high-mastery climate, the direct effect of moral credentials on VKH and the indirect influence of VCB-I on VKH through moral credentials are both weakened, and conversely, both effects are enhanced in a low-mastery climate. However, contrary to the expected hypothesis, moral credits do not mediate the relationship between VCB-I and VKH, which may be due to the differences in the mechanisms between the two moral licensing models.

Originality/value

Prior research has mainly focused on the “victim-centric” perspective to examine the impacts of others’ behaviour on employees’ knowledge hiding. Few works have used the “actor-centric” perspective to analyse the relationship between employees’ prior workplace behaviour and their subsequent knowledge hiding intention. In addition, this study enriches the field research on the voluntary aspects of organisational citizenship behaviour, which differs from its involuntary ones.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Research funding was provided by National Natural Science Foundation of China (71802087; 72172048; 71801097).

Compliance with ethical standards.

Conflict of interest – The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Citation

He, P., Anand, A., Wu, M., Jiang, C. and Xia, Q. (2023), "How and when voluntary citizenship behaviour towards individuals triggers vicious knowledge hiding: the roles of moral licensing and the mastery climate", Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 27 No. 8, pp. 2162-2193. https://doi.org/10.1108/JKM-05-2022-0358

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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