The Prosocial-Culture-Work Nexus: An Integrative Literature Review and Future Research Agenda
Abstract
:1. Background: Introduction Why Organization Culture?
2. Method: Literature Review
3. Results
4. Conclusions
- Social Justice
- Social Impact
- Social Innovation
- Social Capital
- Social Responsibility
- Social Investment
- Social Enterprise
- Social Good
- For EVP and etic studies, which models of organization culture provide the best means of capturing and exploring prosocial phenomenon at work in a useful and critical way?
- For emic studies, what insights from operationalization of prosociality can be taken into work settings in which they can alert and sensitize the ethnographic/anthropologically minded researcher, whichever methods are being used?
- Is it necessary (or even possible) to first synthesis and develop theory around the prosocial-work-culture nexus to avoid being entangled in a proliferation of diverse theories being adopted and used in empirical studies?
- Is the lack of coverage of large cultural domains and the predominance of WEIRD contexts for prosocial-work-culture studies a significant problem or a straightforward opportunity?
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type of Study | Authors | Year | Key Findings | Conceptual and/or Empirical | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ETIC | Theory; Social psychology | [29] | 1986 | 13 specific forms of prosocial behavior are described. | Conceptual; Behaviors vary according to whether they are functional or dysfunctional, role prescribed or not prescribed extra-role, and directed toward an individual or organizational target. |
ETIC | Theory; Comparative | [31] | 2000 | Prosocial behaviors play a significant role in developing countries. | Conceptual; To appreciate specifically what might be done to promote volunteering and OCB in sub-Saharan Africa, as an example of a developing country context. |
ETIC | Theory; Investment | [33] | 2008 | Socially responsible investment (SRI) strongly resembles pro-social behavior. | Conceptual; SRI creates opportunities for businesses to thrive relative to their competitors, reflecting complex combinations of psychological predispositions and institutional and cultural processes. |
ETIC/Comparative; | Comparative: European | [37] | 2011 | National business ideology and employees’ prosocial values. Organization Culture construct-Hofstede referenced. | Empirical; Data from 17 European countries; European Social Survey; GLOBE Country scores; International Social Survey Program (ISSP). World Bank’s corporate corruption index. |
ETIC | One Country: Taiwan | [38] | 2015 | Employees’ organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs). | Empirical; Chinese employee–supervisor dyads from Taiwan in 13 financial institutions. Impression management motives may undermine the positive effects of prosocial values. |
ETIC | Comparative: European | [39] | 2019 | Understanding of how, and in which cultural contexts, formalization creates value for organizations. | Empirical; Data from 7537 employees in 267 organizations across 17 countries. From own research team. Included five formalization items from the Competing Value Framework (Cameron & Quinn Org Culture construct referenced). Genuinely cross-cultural and global team and survey, but confused on focus and culture. |
ETIC | One Country: Netherlands | [40] | 2020 | Highly engaged relations with coworkers and low engaged coworker. | Empirical; Dyads of coworkers. 254 Various sectors, mainly health and education. |
ETIC | One Country: India | [41] | 2021 | Mediating role of job efficacy. | Empirical; Nurses’ perception about HRM system and prosocial organizational behavior. Non-profit hospitals in India. 387 nurses. |
ETIC | One Country: USA | [42] | 2021 | Develop an instrument for measuring pro-social rule breaking (PSRB). | Empirical; University employees. Young, white, female employed students. Three studies with contextual performance ratings made by supervisors and coworkers. Negative impact on perceptions of supervisors. |
ETIC | One Country: Netherlands | [34] | 2009 | SCOOM Hypotheses. Interventions geared toward job enrichment and team-based working. | Empirical; Three panels of supervisors and panel of supervisors/employees in healthcare and other sectors. |
Other/Semiotics | Theory; Semiotics | [32] | 2007 | Interplay between personal-cultural and collective-cultural valuation of different forms of conduct. | Conceptual; ‘Prosocial’ acts may become semiotically transformed into ‘antisocial’ ones, and vice versa. |
Other/Organization Case | One Country: UK | [43] | 2012 | The legacy of altruism in healthcare. | Empirical; 83 interviews part of a broader study. Promoting altruism in the context of healthcare is contradictory and misguided. Instead, an approach to clinical care that is prosocial and empathic is recommended. |
Other/Theory | One Country: USA | [44] | 2021 | Actively Caring for People (AC4P) Movement. | Conceptual; Integration of Behaviorism, Humanism and Positive Psychology ‘throughout the world’. |
Other/ Enterprise | Comparative | [45] | 2019 | Why some businesses are more socially oriented than others in their policies and activities. | Empirical; Entrepreneurs in 43 countries. |
Other/Collectivism | Theory | [46] | 2022 | Four different types of prosocial motives. | Conceptual; Collectivism in non-Western cultures. |
Other/Disciplines | Theory | [47] | 2014 | Business Ethics and Organization Studies. | Conceptual; Performing and providing meaningful work beyond national economic growth alone, striving for meaningful lives. |
Other/Philosophical | Theory | [48] | 2022 | Four different types of prosocial motives. | Conceptual; Aristotelian versus Galilean thinking. Orchestration and bringing together prosocial motives of different kinds. |
Other/Leadership | One Country: USA | [49] | 2016 | Develop and validate the Virtuous Leadership Questionnaire (VLQ). | Conceptual; Model of Confucian vs Aristotelian ‘thinking’ as dominating Western and Eastern thinking. MBA students and follower-leader pairs. |
Other/Leadership | Theory | [50] | 2018 | Ethical leadership interacts with co-worker ethicality. The interactive effect. But, mainly leaders shape behavior. | Empirical; Canadian Military. Importance of leaders and co-workers in shaping the behavior of organizational members. |
Other/HRM | One Country: USA | [30] | 1995 | Explore a new pay plan. Roles of Workplace Justice, Achievement Striving, and Pay Satisfaction. | Empirical; case of Consumer Products company. No company details. |
Other HRM | One Country: England | [51] | 2013 | PSOB exhibited by National Health Service employees. | Empirical; Value-driven HR may offer one means of maintaining and encouraging both altruistic and conscientious act of PSOB. |
EVP/Case Study | One Country: USA | [36] | 2022 | Describe a role-model organization-helping culture. | Conceptual; Role model ‘helpful leader’, norms of reciprocity, reinforcement of norms, willingness to leave slack in employees’ schedules. |
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Gibb, S. The Prosocial-Culture-Work Nexus: An Integrative Literature Review and Future Research Agenda. Behav. Sci. 2023, 13, 203. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13030203
Gibb S. The Prosocial-Culture-Work Nexus: An Integrative Literature Review and Future Research Agenda. Behavioral Sciences. 2023; 13(3):203. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13030203
Chicago/Turabian StyleGibb, Stephen. 2023. "The Prosocial-Culture-Work Nexus: An Integrative Literature Review and Future Research Agenda" Behavioral Sciences 13, no. 3: 203. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13030203
APA StyleGibb, S. (2023). The Prosocial-Culture-Work Nexus: An Integrative Literature Review and Future Research Agenda. Behavioral Sciences, 13(3), 203. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13030203