Effect of Chief Executive Officer’s Sustainable Leadership Styles on Organization Members’ Psychological Well-Being and Organizational Citizenship Behavior
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Research Question 1. What are the effects of the CEO’s sustainable leadership styles (servant, ethical, and authentic leadership) on the psychological well-being of organization members?
- Research Question 2. What are the effects of the CEO’s sustainable leadership styles (servant, ethical, and authentic leadership) on the organizational citizenship behavior of organization members?
- Research Question 3. What are the effects of the psychological well-being of organization members on organizational citizenship behavior?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Base Theory
2.1.1. Situational Theory
Situational Leadership Theory
Contingency Approach of Leadership
2.1.2. Bottom-Up Spillover Theory
2.1.3. Theories of Prosocial Behavior
2.2. Sustainable Leadership Styles
2.3. Servant Leadership
2.4. Ethical Leadership
- Honesty: a leader’s dishonest behavior in the form of lying or distorting reality creates an atmosphere of mistrust wherein organization members cannot trust the leader and thus lose faith.
- Justice: ethical leaders believe in justice and fairness. They prioritize treating every employee equally and place justice and fairness at the center of their decision making. They follow rules and do not give special treatment to any individual, except in special circumstances.
- Respect: leaders should listen carefully to others and confirm their inherent values. They should mentor others to become aware of their own purpose, values, and needs so that ethical qualities prevail throughout the organization. Furthermore, they always respect employees ethically, legally, and normatively [142,143].
- Community: ethical leaders behave altruistically, placing the welfare of their organization members in high esteem, and engage in activities such as team building, mentoring, and empowerment behaviors. This implies that they help to build a community and consider the value of the employees’ goals and the goals of the whole organization.
- Integrity: Ethical leaders demonstrate appropriate values to people around them through their own behavior. Leaders who behave with integrity can strengthen their organization by hiring talented and ethical employees. People generally want to work with leaders who have integrity and are therefore more likely to be attracted to organizations wherein leaders act with honesty and integrity [142,143].
2.5. Authentic Leadership
- Self-awareness refers to how organization members perceive leadership and understand their own strengths, weaknesses, and motivations. The leader’s self-awareness is the most essential element in authentic leadership [147,152]. Self-awareness occurs when the leader is aware of their existence in the circumstances that they are put in. Furthermore, it is not an ultimate goal but a series of processes in which efforts are continuously made to understand the leader’s inherent talents, strengths, objectives, core values, beliefs, and desires. Self-awareness includes a basic understanding of the leader’s knowledge, experience, and capabilities [147,152].
- Ethics/morality refers to how the leader acts according to internalized moral standards and values, rather than based on external pressures such as colleagues, organizations, and society. In this regard, authentic leaders seriously consider moral issues and develop ethical capability, efficacy, courage, and resilience to perform ethical actions sincerely and continuously. In short, morality refers to the process of ethical and transparent decision-making [153,154,155].
- Transparency refers to making efforts to share information and minimize inappropriate emotions. It is related to increasing trust through the expression of actual thoughts and emotions. Transparency is opposed to simply pleasing organization members, obtaining rewards, or avoiding punishment. It refers to actions that follow the leader’s values, preferences, and needs [149,150].
- Balanced processing implies that the leader analyzes all the appropriate information objectively before making decisions. The leader performs balanced processing by collecting opinions in opposition to their own and sufficiently reviewing information and various opinions related to major decision making. Such balanced processing has positive effects on employees’ behaviors through positive modeling [146].
2.6. Psychological Well-Being
2.7. Organizational Citizenship Behavior
- Altruism: this occurs when an organization member voluntarily helps others without expecting anything in return. Examples of altruistic behavior include helping an overburdened coworker to finish early or helping a new employee adapt to the organization quickly [168].
- Sportsmanship: this refers to behaving fairly and not gossiping or spreading rumors when one is dissatisfied with or has complaints about the organization or other members. It also refers to making efforts to understand the positive aspects of a situation. This includes engaging in proactive behavior for trying to solve a problem by directly talking to the involved person instead of simply putting up with the matter of complaint [171].
- Courtesy: this refers to taking steps in advance to prevent sudden frustration with other members regarding one’s work or personal circumstances. This behavior involves contacting other members who may be affected by one’s decisions or actions to ask for their understanding in advance and coordinate disagreements [171,172].
- Civic Virtue: this refers to showing interest in and actively participating in various official and unofficial activities of the organization. It includes social activities and interpersonal relationships with other organization members through clubs and social gatherings within the organization, proactive activities, and making changes by suggesting improvements that may help in the development of the organization [173].
2.8. Relationship between Key Variables
2.8.1. CEO’s Leadership and Psychological Well-Being
2.8.2. CEO’s Leadership and Organizational Citizenship Behavior
2.8.3. Psychological Well-Being and Organizational Citizenship Behavior
3. Methods
3.1. Research Model
3.2. Measurement of Variables
3.3. Settings of Respondents
3.4. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Reliability and Validity
4.2. Correlation Analysis
4.3. Hypothesis Test
- The effects of a CEOs’ sustainable leadership styles (servant, ethical, and authentic leadership) on organization members’ psychological well-being was examined. According to the analysis, CEOs’ servant (β = 0.173, t = 2.046, p < 0.05) and authentic leadership (β = 0.292, t = 3.399, p < 0.01) showed statistically significant positive (+) effects on the psychological well-being of organization members. However, ethical leadership did not. Therefore, Hypothesis 1 and Hypothesis 3 were supported, while Hypothesis 2 was not supported.
- The effects of CEOs’ sustainable leadership styles (servant, ethical, and authentic leadership) on organizational citizenship behavior among organization members was examined. According to the analysis, CEOs’ ethical leadership (β = 0.184, t = 2.039, p < 0.05) had statistically significant positive (+) effects on the organizational citizenship behavior among organization members. However, servant and authentic leadership did not. Therefore, Hypothesis 5 was supported, while Hypotheses 4 and 6 were not supported.
- The effects of organization members’ psychological well-being on organizational citizenship behavior was examined. According to the analysis, organization members’ psychological well-being (β = 0.493, t = 10.403, p < 0.01) had statistically significant positive (+) effects on organizational citizenship behavior. Therefore, Hypothesis 7 was supported.
4.4. Mediated Effect Test
- Psychological well-being showed a mediating effect in the path of servant leadership → psychological well-being → organizational citizenship behavior.
- Psychological well-being did not show a mediated effect in the path of ethical leadership → psychological well-being → organizational citizenship behavior.
- Psychological well-being showed a mediating effect in the path of authentic leadership → psychological well-being → organizational citizenship behavior. In particular, psychological well-being showed a fully mediated effect.
5. Discussion and Conclusions
5.1. Summary of the Study
- CEOs’ servant and authentic leadership had statistically significant positive (+) effects on organization members’ psychological well-being. These results support the results of previous studies conducted by Coetzer et al. [38,39], Ilies et al. [58], Jensen and Luthans [179], and Rivkin et al. [174] and can be summarized as follows. First, in terms of servant leadership, the results imply that CEOs should endeavor to build empathy with organization members based on listening, communicating, and coordinating attitudes. Moreover, they mean that CEOs should show interest in solving the problems and discomforts faced by organization members and try to develop their capabilities. CEOs should always have a humble attitude and put forth efforts to work together based on persuasion rather than obedience. Furthermore, they should provide alternatives through clear awareness and present visions through broad thinking. Therefore, CEOs should strive to cultivate proper servant leadership, rather than making efforts focusing on temporary or superficial behavior-oriented servant leadership, to increase the psychological well-being of organization members. When CEOs demonstrate servant leadership to heed the troubles of organization members and motivate them ceaselessly while leading them by example, the psychological well-being of organization members increases.Second, in terms of authentic leadership, the results imply that CEOs should reflect on past behaviors for their growth and maintain their initial commitment through self-reflection. They should try to be consistent with organization members by controlling their emotions and implementing the company’s business plans and goals while considering the capabilities of organization members. The results also imply that CEOs should be undeterred by external pressures, make decisions transparently, put employees at ease, and embrace their flaws. Thereby, CEOs’ authentic leadership increases organization members’ psychological well-being, which leads to progressive thinking and behavior and ultimately serves as a major factor in improving job performance. When the leadership lacks authenticity, CEOs use their relationship with organization members to pursue their own interests, and such leadership obviously has negative effects on the organization members’ psychological well-being.However, CEOs’ ethical leadership did not have a statistically significant effect on organization members’ psychological well-being. This result contradicts the findings of a previous study by Teimouri et al. [52]. If a CEO’s ethical leadership emphasizes honesty and trust morally/legally/normatively, they may be considered inflexible. This also means that if the CEO persuades organization members ethically based on the rules and principles to cooperate, it may disturb the members’ psychological well-being. If the function of goal setting is emphasized only in terms of ethics in an organization, communication may not be clear. Instead, it may disturb the organization members’ psychological well-being, ultimately reducing the function of motivation. Nevertheless, as a means of achieving organization members’ performance goals, CEOs’ ethical leadership is important. In this study, however, CEOs’ ethical leadership did not enhance the function of giving meaning to tasks through the organization members’ psychological well-being.
- Ethical leadership had a statistically positive (+) effect on organizational citizenship behavior. This supports the results of previous studies by Brown and Treviño [188] and Zhu et al. [78] and can be summarized as follows. CEOs should not lie or distort reality morally/legally/normatively and should act based on the principles of fairness and honesty. They should always respect employees as human beings morally/legally/normatively and pursue common interests with the company and employees. Only when the CEO behaves with honesty and trustworthiness morally/legally/normatively can an organization’s members trust and follow them. We found that CEOs’ ethical leadership could increase organizational citizenship behavior among organization members.However, CEOs’ servant and authentic leadership did not have statistically significant effects on organizational citizenship behavior. These results contradict the results of previous studies by Avolio et al. [57], Krog and Govender [182], and Shah et al. [40]. In fact, researchers have emphasized that servant and authentic leadership are very important in business administration and management. However, this study focused on the servant and authentic leadership of CEOs rather than that of immediate superiors and managers. As organizational citizenship behavior of members is voluntary, there is no official reward system internally in the organization. Therefore, various unofficial rewards should be offered to promote it. Particularly, interest and recognition by the immediate superior or manager are more important than the CEO’s leadership in terms of exerting influence on the attitudes and behaviors of on-site organization members. Therefore, on-site leaders have the power to encourage organization members to demonstrate organizational citizenship behavior more actively by closely observing organization members and immediately praising and encouraging them. Herein, however, CEOs’ servant and authentic leadership did not increase organizational citizenship behavior.
- Organization members’ psychological well-being had a statistically significant positive (+) effect on organizational citizenship behavior. This supports the results of previous studies by Huang et al. [60], Kang et al. [90], Kim and Park [197], and Xu et al. [62] and can be summarized as follows. Organizational citizenship behavior increases as psychological well-being increases, that is, organization members embrace life positively, have higher self-esteem (confidence) and clear life goals, take care of work that falls under their responsibilities, live so as to realize their creativity and potential, and are content with the results of life. Organization members with high psychological well-being are more willing to spare time to help busy colleagues at work and try to keep up with organizational changes and innovations. Furthermore, they do not infringe or interfere with the rights of colleagues, voluntarily comply with corporate rules and regulations, and refrain from complaints and unprofessional behavior at work, thereby showing strong organizational citizenship behavior.
5.2. Research Implications
- This study is significant in that it studied CEOs’ sustainable leadership styles in the organizational behavior theory aspect of business administration and psychology and empirically analyzed how these leadership styles affected organization members’ psychological well-being and organizational citizenship behavior. Specially, situational leadership theory and the contingency approach of leadership were utilized and applied based on situational theory. Based on a total of four foundational theories, that is, bottom-up spillover theory, theories of prosocial behavior, and so on, this study empirically analyzed what influence CEOs’ sustainable leadership styles (servant, ethical, and authentic leadership) had on the psychological well-being and organizational citizenship behaviors of organization members.
- CEOs are faced with a number of responsibilities, ranging from being in charge of their company’s performance, to serving as a major spokesperson, to setting strategic directions, maximizing organizational potential, to securing internal and external stakeholders’ participation. Notably, such responsibilities become much more complicated in crisis situations because employees and stakeholders ask CEOs for direction, information, and motivation. Therefore, the results of this study suggest that CEOs’ sustainable leadership styles and actions to improve the possibility of success are extremely important. In other words, they imply that a swift leadership pattern is needed for CEOs to meet the challenges of the times. More specifically: (1) through sustainable leadership, efforts should be made to surpass the general level; (2) important measures should be identified, and preemptive moves should be made; (3) a discriminatory and dynamic approach to strategies should be taken; and (4) positive social objectives should be clearly expressed and practiced. CEOs are attracting more attention than ever, leading companies in today’s rapidly changing times. This suggests that it is necessary to comprehend principles that show when, where, and how important leaders are and the sustainable leadership styles that can increase their chances of success. This study derived constructive implications that CEOs can overcome today’s challenges through sustainable leadership styles.
- Currently, among the various leadership theories, servant leadership, in which the leader serves the organization members based on respect for people and supports them with a serving attitude to unlock their potential [19,24,25,27], is a typical example. In fact, the perspective presented in leadership theories shows only one aspect of this kind of leadership. For example, CEOs’ servant leadership was found to increase organization members’ psychological well-being. However, not everything is solved by servant leadership alone. Depending on the situation, the leader sometimes needs to become an authentic leader as well. In other words, the leader should exhibit multifaceted behavior according to the situation. Therefore, as mentioned earlier, this study derived CEOs’ sustainable leadership styles. In particular, it found that servant and authentic leadership increased organization members’ psychological well-being when applied appropriately.
- An authentic leader sets inner moral standards clearly and then uses those standards to control themselves [20,21,26]. Some scholars have argued that authentic leaders should be sincere and show their inner morals transparently while building relationships with others [53,54,155]. As such, there is an underlying assumption in authentic leadership that if the leader shows authentic behavior rather than instructing organization members, those members watch, learn, and follow [53,54,155]. In other words, the leader should exhibit model behaviors [55,145,189]. Based on fundamental theory, this study showed that CEOs’ authentic leadership could increase organization members’ psychological well-being and had a sustainable effect on it.
- Many CEOs now lead multinational labor groups and face the challenge of working with several stakeholders in different organizational sectors. In an increasingly globalized and flexible organization, it is necessary to educate CEOs on the importance of ethical leadership. The results of this study indicate that organizational citizenship behavior increased when organization members recognized that the CEO had moral values of honesty, fairness, integrity, and transparency. Therefore, this study suggests that CEOs should provide an environment that promotes moral values through official systems (e.g., hiring process and incentive/job promotion system) and the organizational culture’s unofficial elements (e.g., meetings and discussions on ethics, unofficial job promotion procedures perceived within the organization) to exhibit and maintain ethical leadership. CEOs should recognize the importance of moral values in the corporate vision and firmly establish them. Furthermore, CEOs should always engage in work as ethical leaders and inspiring role models for the establishment of these ethical values.
- Ultimately, organizations should recognize the importance of responsibility and sustainability more strongly in the context of business ethics and integrate these elements into their strategic agendas and value norms. The results of this study show CEOs’ ethical responsibility and sustainability. If a CEO makes a decision that lacks ethical values and is not recognized socially, ethical issues from the past to the present accumulate, organization members do not trust the CEO, and organizational citizenship behavior does not grow. Future studies in social science research can focus on CEOs’ ethical leadership and its impacts.
5.3. Limitations and Future Studies
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Variable | Operational Definition | Measured Item | Researchers (Sources) |
---|---|---|---|
Servant Leadership | The style of leadership in which the leader serves the organization members based on respect for people and supports them with a serving attitude to unlock their potentials. | 1. Our company’s CEO has listening/communicating/coordinating attitudes and makes effort to build empathy. (Coordinating) | |
2. Our company’s CEO shows interest in healing the pains of organization members and supports capability development. (Assistance) | |||
3. Our company’s CEO serves with a humble attitude and makes an effort to work together based on persuasion instead of blind obedience. (Service) | |||
4. Our company’s CEO provides alternatives through clear awareness and presents vision through broad thinking. (Presenting direction/vision) | |||
5. Our company’s CEO helps predict the future with keen insights and build the community among organization members. (Assistance) | |||
Ethical Leadership | The ability to demonstrate morally/legally/normatively appropriate conduct through personal actions and interpersonal relations and promoting such actions to organization members through communication, support, and decision-making. | 1. Our company’s CEO does not lie or distort reality morally/legally/normatively. (Honesty) | |
2. Our company’s CEO has principles of fairness and honesty morally/legally/normatively. (Justice) | |||
3. Our company’s CEO always respects employees morally/legally/normatively. (Respect) | |||
4. Our company’s CEO pursues common interests (with the company, employees) morally/legally/normatively. (Community) | |||
5. Our company’s CEO behaves with honesty and trustworthiness morally/legally/normatively. (Integrity) | |||
Authentic Leadership | Establishing firm values and principles based on clear self-awareness and having positive effects on the organization members by forming transparent relationships. | 1. Our company’s CEO grows by reflecting on past behaviors. (Self-awareness) | |
2. Our company’s CEO maintains initial commitment through self-reflection. (Self-awareness) | |||
3. Our company’s CEO tries to be consistent with employees by controlling their own emotions. (Transparency) | |||
4. Our company’s CEO implements the company’s business plans and goals by considering the capabilities of the employees. (Processing) | |||
5. Our company’s CEO is undeterred by external pressure, makes decisions transparently, puts the employees at ease, and embraces their flaws. (Morality) | |||
Psychological Well-being | The degree to which one lives in the direction of positively embracing life, having clear goals, and realizing their potentials. | 1. I embrace life positively and live with self-esteem (confidence). | |
2. I have clear life goals and take care of work that falls under my responsibility. | |||
3. Compared to people around me, I am happy and content with my life overall. | |||
4. I manage personal/company or financial problems properly and live morally. | |||
5. I try to realize creativity and potentials, and I am content with the results of my life. | |||
Organizational Citizenship Behavior | The degree to which an organization member voluntarily supports organizational development without proper compensation despite it not being official work. | 1. I am willing to spare some time to help busy colleagues. (Altruism) | |
2. I try to keep up with organizational changes and innovations. (Civic Virtue) | |||
3. I try not to infringe or interfere with the rights of my colleagues. (Courtesy) | |||
4. I comply with the corporate rules and regulations voluntarily. (Conscientiousness) | |||
5. I refrain from complaints and private behavior at work. (Sportsmanship) |
Item | Frequency | % | |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 326 | 50.2 |
Female | 323 | 49.8 | |
Age | 20s | 103 | 15.9 |
30s | 178 | 27.4 | |
40s | 179 | 27.6 | |
50s | 189 | 29.1 | |
Education | High school graduate | 106 | 16.3 |
Technical college graduate | 120 | 18.5 | |
University graduate | 328 | 50.5 | |
Graduate school graduate | 95 | 14.6 | |
Monthly Income (Personal) | 2 million KRW or less | 207 | 31.9 |
2.01–3.00 million KRW | 133 | 20.5 | |
3.01–4.00 million KRW | 100 | 15.4 | |
4.01–5.00 million KRW | 81 | 12.5 | |
5.01 million KRW or higher | 128 | 19.7 | |
Race | White | 316 | 48.7 |
Asian | 226 | 34.8 | |
Black | 107 | 16.5 | |
Nationality | South Korea | 208 | 32.0 |
The United States | 143 | 22.0 | |
The United Kingdom | 139 | 21.4 | |
South Africa | 159 | 24.5 | |
Corporate Size (Including Subsidiaries) | Midsize companies | 440 | 67.8 |
Large enterprises | 209 | 32.2 |
Variable | Item | Convergent Validity | Cronbach’s Alpha | Multicollinearity | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Outer Loadings | Composite Reliability | AVE | VIF | |||
Servant leadership | Servant leadership 1 | 0.884 | 0.943 | 0.768 | 0.924 | 3.418 |
Servant leadership 2 | 0.883 | 3.456 | ||||
Servant leadership 3 | 0.884 | 3.185 | ||||
Servant leadership 4 | 0.851 | 2.515 | ||||
Servant leadership 5 | 0.879 | 2.965 | ||||
Ethical leadership | Ethical leadership 1 | 0.880 | 0.955 | 0.810 | 0.941 | 3.093 |
Ethical leadership 2 | 0.901 | 3.558 | ||||
Ethical leadership 3 | 0.913 | 3.872 | ||||
Ethical leadership 4 | 0.894 | 3.459 | ||||
Ethical leadership 5 | 0.911 | 3.768 | ||||
Authentic leadership | Authentic leadership 1 | 0.880 | 0.948 | 0.785 | 0.932 | 3.390 |
Authentic leadership 2 | 0.904 | 3.919 | ||||
Authentic leadership 3 | 0.857 | 2.647 | ||||
Authentic leadership 4 | 0.886 | 3.172 | ||||
Authentic leadership 5 | 0.902 | 3.582 | ||||
Psychological well-being | Psychological well-being 1 | 0.808 | 0.905 | 0.655 | 0.868 | 2.013 |
Psychological well-being 2 | 0.832 | 2.123 | ||||
Psychological well-being 3 | 0.826 | 2.121 | ||||
Psychological well-being 4 | 0.802 | 1.993 | ||||
Psychological well-being 5 | 0.776 | 1.831 | ||||
Organizational citizenship behavior | Organizational citizenship behavior 1 | 0.756 | 0.875 | 0.585 | 0.823 | 1.669 |
Organizational citizenship behavior 2 | 0.795 | 1.827 | ||||
Organizational citizenship behavior 3 | 0.758 | 1.778 | ||||
Organizational citizenship behavior 4 | 0.784 | 1.916 | ||||
Organizational citizenship behavior 5 | 0.728 | 1.662 |
Variable | Servant Leadership | Ethical Leadership | Authentic Leadership | Psychological Well-Being | Organizational Citizenship Behavior |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Servant leadership | 0.876 | — | — | — | — |
Ethical leadership | 0.698 | 0.900 | — | — | — |
Authentic leadership | 0.685 | 0.696 | 0.886 | — | — |
Psychological well-being | 0.587 | 0.590 | 0.600 | 0.809 | — |
Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.557 | 0.577 | 0.573 | 0.669 | 0.765 |
Path | Β-Value | Sample Mean | Standard Deviation | t-Value | p-Value | Hypothesis | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
H1 | Servant leadership | → | Psychological well-being | 0.173 | 0.172 | 0.085 | 2.046 | 0.041 | Supported |
H2 | Ethical leadership | → | Psychological well-being | 0.173 | 0.177 | 0.095 | 1.812 | 0.071 | Not supported |
H3 | Authentic leadership | → | Psychological well-being | 0.292 | 0.291 | 0.086 | 3.399 | 0.001 | Supported |
H4 | Servant leadership | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.014 | 0.012 | 0.089 | 0.155 | 0.877 | Not supported |
H5 | Ethical leadership | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.184 | 0.185 | 0.090 | 2.039 | 0.042 | Supported |
H6 | Authentic leadership | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.100 | 0.103 | 0.090 | 1.121 | 0.263 | Not supported |
H7 | Psychological well-being | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.493 | 0.492 | 0.047 | 10.403 | 0.000 | Supported |
Path | Β-Value | Sample Mean | Standard Deviation | t-Value | p-Value | Mediated Effect | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Servant leadership | → | Psychological well-being | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.085 | 0.084 | 0.043 | 2.004 | 0.046 | Yes |
2 | Ethical leadership | → | Psychological well-being | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.085 | 0.087 | 0.048 | 1.762 | 0.079 | No |
3 | Authentic leadership | → | Psychological well-being | → | Organizational citizenship behavior | 0.144 | 0.144 | 0.045 | 3.186 | 0.002 | Yes |
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Choi, H.-j. Effect of Chief Executive Officer’s Sustainable Leadership Styles on Organization Members’ Psychological Well-Being and Organizational Citizenship Behavior. Sustainability 2021, 13, 13676. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413676
Choi H-j. Effect of Chief Executive Officer’s Sustainable Leadership Styles on Organization Members’ Psychological Well-Being and Organizational Citizenship Behavior. Sustainability. 2021; 13(24):13676. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413676
Chicago/Turabian StyleChoi, Hyun-ju. 2021. "Effect of Chief Executive Officer’s Sustainable Leadership Styles on Organization Members’ Psychological Well-Being and Organizational Citizenship Behavior" Sustainability 13, no. 24: 13676. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413676
APA StyleChoi, H. -j. (2021). Effect of Chief Executive Officer’s Sustainable Leadership Styles on Organization Members’ Psychological Well-Being and Organizational Citizenship Behavior. Sustainability, 13(24), 13676. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413676