Scientific journal paper Q2
Relationship conflict, low goodwill trust, innovation propensity-and help? How to encourage helping behaviours even in conflict‐laden work settings
Dirk De Clercq (De Clercq, D.); Renato Pereira (Pereira, R.);
Journal Title
Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences
Year (definitive publication)
2023
Language
English
Country
United States of America
More Information
Web of Science®

Times Cited: 1

(Last checked: 2024-11-21 11:13)

View record in Web of Science®


: 0.8
Scopus

Times Cited: 1

(Last checked: 2024-11-18 08:43)

View record in Scopus


: 0.5
Google Scholar

Times Cited: 2

(Last checked: 2024-11-17 20:57)

View record in Google Scholar

Abstract
To unpack the link between employees' relationship conflict and helping behaviours, this study postulates a mediating role of the extent to which employees exhibit low goodwill trust in co-workers and a moderating role of their innovation propensity. As the findings confirm, emotion-laden conflict compromises employees' propensities to assist co-workers because they believe that they cannot count on co-workers’ goodwill, which, as we theorize, is informed by their desire to protect their self-esteem. The extent to which employees derive joy from generating novel ideas subdues this process. This study points to a notable mechanism (low goodwill trust) by which emotion-based tensions translate into low voluntarism and how this process is disrupted by an intrinsic motivation for innovation.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Conservation of resources theory,Goodwill trust,Helping behaviour,Innovation propensity,Relationship conflict
  • Economics and Business - Social Sciences
  • Political Science - Social Sciences