用叙述抵御未经证实的指控:在持续危机中,主要叙述和次要叙述在组织反应有效性中的作用

Yen-I Lee, Xuerong Lu, Taylor S. Voges, Yan Jin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究整合了元叙事和危机叙事理论,以确定管理不确定和高压危机情境的最佳方法。一项在线实验使用美国成年人样本来检验(1)关于受害者的新闻故事中的主要叙述和(2)被指控组织使用的不同危机叙述的次要叙述如何影响该组织对正在进行的危机情况的公共传播结果。结果表明,强调更新的二次叙事在(1)降低组织危机责任感知、(2)减少组织声誉损害和(3)提高组织支持意愿方面具有显著作用。此外,研究结果还发现,组织危机责任感知和组织声誉感知在次要叙述(使用更新危机叙述)与参与者对危机组织的意向支持之间的关系中起序向中介作用。研究结果推动了危机叙事理论的发展,并为组织应对由未经证实的对其成员的性骚扰指控引发的持续危机提供了有效和道德的处方。
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Fending off Unverified Accusation with Narratives: The Role of Primary and Secondary Narratives in Organizational Response Effectiveness in an Ongoing Crisis
This study integrates theories of metanarration and crisis narratives to identify optimal approaches to managing uncertain and high-pressure crisis situations. An online experiment used a U.S. adult sample to examine how (1) the primary narrative in a news story about the victim and (2) the secondary narrative with different crisis narratives used by the accused organization impacted the outcomes of the organization’s public communication about the ongoing crisis situation. Results showed that the secondary narrative, emphasizing renewal, played a significant role in (1) lowering perceived organizational crisis responsibility, (2) lessening organizational reputation damage, and (3) boosting supportive intention toward the organization. In addition, findings revealed that perceived organizational crisis responsibility and perceived organizational reputation functioned as sequential mediators for the relationship between the secondary narrative (using renewal crisis narrative) and participants’ intended support of the crisis-stricken organization. Findings advance crisis narrative theory and offer prescriptions for effective and ethical organizational responses in managing an ongoing crisis triggered by an unverified sexual harassment accusation against its members.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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