Organization Culture as an Explanation for Employee Discipline Practices
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Date
2006-03-01Author
Aimee L. Franklin
Javier F. Pagan
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Abstract
Most supervisors dread employee discipline and often employ strategies not officially sanctioned by the organization. Poorly designed discipline systems cause this variation in discipline practices. Inconsistent discipline can cause losses in productivity and reduce employee morale. Extant literature offers little in the form of guidance for improving this important human resource activity. This article explore where normative literature on organizational culture may have explanatory value for understanding variation in discipline practices. The article suggests two groups of factors that have causal effects on discipline practices. The tangible factors are those describing the formal practices the organization wishes its employees to follow. The intangible factors provide cues for explaining why informal strategies emerge as successful practices for getting things done. Using this conception of organization culture, the article proposes hypotheses for future testing to validate the suspected influence of culture on decisions regarding employee discipline.
Citation
Franklin, A. L., & Pagan, J. F. (2006). Organization Culture as an Explanation for Employee Discipline Practices. Review of Public Personnel Administration, 26(1), 52-73. doi: 10.1177/0734371x05277335