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The cascading role of leader-induced defensive cognitions and citizenship pressures in navigating employee silence

Muhammad Zohaib Tahir (Department of Management Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad, Islamabad, Pakistan and School of Management, University of Bath, Bath, UK)
Tahir Mumtaz Awan (Department of Management Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad, Islamabad, Pakistan)
Farooq Mughal (School of Management, University of Bath, Bath, UK)
Aamer Waheed (COMSATS University Islamabad, Islamabad, Pakistan)

Management Research Review

ISSN: 2040-8269

Article publication date: 9 September 2024

101

Abstract

Purpose

The study aims to attain insights into the impact of destructive leadership and citizenship pressures in inducing employee silence through the lens of social exchange and the conservation of resources theory. The research further relies on Friedkin’s attitude-behaviour linkage framework (2010), while taking into account the role of employees’ defensive cognitive evaluations, as against the previously accented emotion-focused explanations.

Design/methodology/approach

In order to corroborate the pertinence and contextual relevance of the framework, a survey-based study was conducted with a purposively selected sample of 133 full-time employees from the systemically important banks. The sample size was determined through an a-priori power analysis using G*Power, and the hypothesized serial mediation model was tested using PLS-SEM in SmartPLS v_4.0.

Findings

The findings accentuate the significance of destructive leadership in navigating employees’ silence directly and serially through continuance commitment and compulsory citizenship behaviours. The study also underlines that rather than being portrayed as unidimensional outcomes centered on attitudes, employee behaviours ought to be considered contingent retorts under attitude-behaviour cascades.

Originality/value

The study contributes to strategic human resource management literature by offering a cognition-based explanation for employees’ silence, taking Pakistan’s cultural and contextual orientation into cognizance. Extending on the attitude-behaviour linkage framework, the study provides that attitudes shaped by defensive cognitive evaluations may concurrently foster involuntary (citizenship) as well as voluntary (silence) behaviours.

Keywords

Citation

Tahir, M.Z., Awan, T.M., Mughal, F. and Waheed, A. (2024), "The cascading role of leader-induced defensive cognitions and citizenship pressures in navigating employee silence", Management Research Review, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/MRR-12-2023-0920

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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