Organizational Justice: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Management
- Vol. 16 (2) , 399-432
- https://doi.org/10.1177/014920639001600208
Abstract
The present article chronicles the history of the field of organizational justice, identifies current themes, and recommends new directions for the future. A historical overview of the field focuses on research and theory in the distributive justice tradition (e.g., equity theory) as well as the burgeoning topic of procedural justice. This forms the foundation for the discussion offive popular themes in contemporary organizational justice research: (a) attempts to distinguish procedural justice and distributive justice empirically, (b) the development of new conceptual advances, (c) consideration of the interpersonal determinants of procedural justice judgments, (d) new directions in tests of equity theory, and (e) applications of justice-based explanations to many different organizational phenomena. In closing, a plea is made for future work that improves procedural justice research methodologically (with respect to scope, setting, and scaling), and that attempts to integrate and unify disparate concepts in the distributive and procedural justice traditions.This publication has 102 references indexed in Scilit:
- Managerial responsibilities and procedural justiceEmployee Responsibilities and Rights Journal, 1989
- Using diaries to promote procedural justice in performance appraisalsSocial Justice Research, 1987
- Interactional fairness judgments: The influence of causal accountsSocial Justice Research, 1987
- The role of procedural and distributive justice in organizational behaviorSocial Justice Research, 1987
- Toward general principles of managerial fairnessSocial Justice Research, 1987
- Distributive and procedural justice in the workplaceSocial Justice Research, 1987
- Why procedural justice in organizations?Social Justice Research, 1987
- Procedural justice researchSocial Justice Research, 1987
- Distributive justice: Theory and researchSocial Justice Research, 1987
- Layoffs, self-esteem, and survivor guilt: Motivational, affective, and attitudinal consequencesOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1985