给和平一个机会?管制焦点如何影响棘手冲突环境下的组织冲突事件

IF 0.7 Q4 MANAGEMENT Irish Journal of Management Pub Date : 2023-09-07 DOI:10.1177/01492063231196556
L. Weber, Angelique Slade Shantz, Geoffrey M. Kistruck, Robert B. Lount
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引用次数: 0

摘要

棘手的冲突环境(ICE)是一种极端的环境,在这种环境中,群体之间深刻的、无法解决的冲突是其中参与者的核心。虽然在组织研究中通常假设非ice,但ice在组织中越来越常见。此外,这种背景影响人们对组织内部潜在组织冲突事件的解释,从而影响组织冲突事件的可能性和情绪强度。然而,一个潜在的冲突事件,比如在如何完成任务上的分歧,在一个更典型的环境中可能被认为是良性的,同样的事件在ICE中发生时,更有可能被解释为更加消极和情感强烈,增加了冲突事件(冲突行为)的频率。先前的研究表明,在一个典型的环境中,促进框架(实现积极的)干预比预防框架(避免消极的)干预更能减少冲突,通过暂时诱导促进取向来减少解释冲突的可能性。然而,我们认为ICE诱导了一个强有力的预防重点,它超越了促进框架的干预措施。相反,我们认为,在ICE中,预防而不是促进框架的干预可能更有效,因为它“匹配”了强有力的预防重点。为了验证这一预测,我们研究了加纳农村农业合作社(ICE)在制定旨在解决冲突的预防与促进框架干预措施后冲突事件数量的差异。一项为期9个月的实地实验的定量和定性结果支持了我们的假设。
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Give Peace a Chance? How Regulatory Foci Influence Organizational Conflict Events in Intractable Conflict Environments
An intractable conflict environment (ICE) is an extreme context in which deep, unsolvable conflict between groups is central to the actors within it. While non-ICEs are typically assumed in organizational research, ICEs are increasingly common contexts for organizations. Moreover, this context influences peoples’ interpretation of potential organizational conflict incidents inside the organization and therefore the likelihood and emotional intensity of organizational conflict events. Whereas a potential conflict incident, such as a disagreement over how to complete a task, may be perceived as benign in a more typical environment, the same incident is more likely to be interpreted as much more negative and emotionally intense when taking place in an ICE, increasing the frequency of conflict events (conflictual behavior). Prior work suggests that, in a typical environment, promotion-framed (achieving positives) interventions reduce conflict more than prevention-framed (avoiding negatives) interventions by temporarily inducing promotion orientations that reduce the likelihood of interpreting conflict. However, we argue an ICE induces a strong prevention focus, which overrides promotion-framed interventions. Instead, we argue in an ICE, a prevention- rather than promotion-framed intervention is likely to be more effective because it “matches” the strong prevention focus. To test this prediction, we examine the difference in number of conflict events in farming cooperatives in rural Ghana (an ICE) after instituting prevention- versus promotion-framed interventions aimed at addressing conflict. Quantitative and qualitative findings from a 9-month field experiment support our hypothesis.
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