Title : ( Cyberloafing in public sector of developing countries: job embeddedness as a context )
Authors: Ahmadreza Karimi Mazidi , Fariborz Rahimnia , Saeed Mortazavi , Mohammad Mehraeen ,Access to full-text not allowed by authors
Abstract
Purpose – This study aims to investigate the possible negativity of job embeddedness in developing countries. Operationally, the study aimed to configure the relationship between job embeddedness and cyberloafing with respect to both contextual (job satisfaction) and individual (internet addiction) factors. Design/methodology/approach – Incorporating the conservation of resources theory and reactance theory into the theory of job embeddedness, the present study adopted a resource-based approach to job embeddedness to examine its main and moderated effects on cyberloafing in a three-way interaction model. With the focus on public organizations, 500 administrative employees from an Iranian university were surveyed using self-reporting measures, and the collected data were analyzed using partial least squares– structural equation modeling and hierarchical moderated multiple regression. Findings – As predicted, job embeddedness was positively associated with cyberloafing; however, in contrast with predictions, job satisfaction had no inverse impact on the job embeddedness–cyberloafing relationship, and its role was limited to neutralizing the increasing effect of internet addiction. Practical implications – Consideration should be given to how job embeddedness interacts with contextual and individual moderators to affect cyberloafing. In particular, this study implicated some practical procedures to provide employees with on- and off-the-job resources and avoid fighting over the organization’s resources. Additionally, this study provides insights into embeddedness-satisfaction interplay to provide employees with propitious work conditions in line with organizational productivity. Originality/value – There is little research on the association between job embeddedness and counterproductive work behaviors, and the findings are inconsistent. A review of the literature revealed no study addressing cyberloafing implications of job embeddedness. This study expands the literature by theoretically and empirically correlating job embeddedness and cyberloafing in a non-western developing country. Accordingly, the significance of this study is its capability in mitigating cyberloafing behaviors by promoting the adverse job embeddedness.
Keywords
, Keywords Counterproductive work behavior, Employee deviance, Internet, Cyberloafing, Job embeddedness@article{paperid:1083528,
author = {Karimi Mazidi, Ahmadreza and Rahimnia, Fariborz and Mortazavi, Saeed and Mehraeen, Mohammad},
title = {Cyberloafing in public sector of developing countries: job embeddedness as a context},
journal = {Personnel Review},
year = {2020},
volume = {50},
month = {September},
issn = {0048-3486},
pages = {1705--1738},
numpages = {33},
keywords = {Keywords Counterproductive work behavior; Employee deviance; Internet; Cyberloafing; Job embeddedness},
}
%0 Journal Article
%T Cyberloafing in public sector of developing countries: job embeddedness as a context
%A Karimi Mazidi, Ahmadreza
%A Rahimnia, Fariborz
%A Mortazavi, Saeed
%A Mehraeen, Mohammad
%J Personnel Review
%@ 0048-3486
%D 2020