Culture as Context: A Five-Country Study of Discretionary Green Workplace Behavior

Author:

Jiang Yuan1,Jackson Susan E.2ORCID,Shim Hanbo2,Budhwar Pawan3,Renwick Douglas W. S.4,Jabbour Charbel Jose Chiappetta5,Jabbour Ana Beatriz Lopes de Sousa6,Tang Guiyao7,Müller-Camen Michael8,Wagner Marcus9ORCID,Kim Andrea10

Affiliation:

1. China Europe International Business School, Shanghai, China

2. Rutgers University, New Brunswick, USA

3. Aston Business School, Birmingham, UK

4. Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK

5. University of Lincoln, Ecully, France

6. University of Lincoln, Caen, France

7. Shandong University, Jinan, China

8. Vienna University of Economics and Business, Wien, Austria

9. University of Ausburg, Augsburg, Germany

10. Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, Republic of Korea

Abstract

To understand the conditions that support employee green behavior across cultures, we develop and test a conceptual model that describes how normative cues from work team leaders and peers in combination with country cultural norms shape discretionary green workplace behavior. Data from 1,605 employees in five countries indicate that power distance moderates the positive relationships observed between the discretionary green workplace behavior of leaders and their subordinates. In addition, an observed positive relationship between team green advocacy and individual discretionary green workplace behavior held across both collectivistic and individualistic cultures, contrary to our predictions. By taking macro-level cultural context into account and examining its interplay with lower-level work team norms, the study makes a significant contribution to understanding and intervening employees’ discretionary green behavior at work.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Austrian Science Foundation

German Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,General Environmental Science

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