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  5. Research on Behavioral Integrity: A Promising Construct for Positive Organizational Scholarship

Research on Behavioral Integrity: A Promising Construct for Positive Organizational Scholarship

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Simons5_Research_on_behavioral_integrity.pdf (243.52 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/72254
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SHA Articles and Chapters
Author
Simons, Tony L.
Tomlinson, Edward C.
Leroy, Hannes
Abstract

Behavioral integrity (BI) is the perception that another person, group, or entity lives by his word—delivers on promises and enacts the same values he espouses. This construct is more basic than trust or justice, and is typically measured as the perceived pattern of alignment between words and deeds. Empirical studies have shown it to have powerful positive consequences for the attitudes and performance of followers, managers, and organizations, and also that BI moderates the impact of other leader behaviors on these outcomes. Only a few studies have examined antecedents, and fewer still have examined moderated antecedents. Although initial terrain has been sketched out by early studies, there is much yet to learn about the workings of this high-potential construct.

Date Issued
2011-01-01
Keywords
behavioral integrity
•
leadership
•
trust
•
values
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © Oxford University Press. Final version published as: Simons, T., Tomlinson, E. C., & Leroy, H. (2011). Research on behavioral integrity: A promising construct for positive organizational scholarship. In G. M. Spreitzer & K. S. Cameron (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of positive organizational scholarship (pp. 325-339). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Type
article

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