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  5. Ethical Considerations and Change Recipients’ Reactions: ‘It’s Not All About Me’
 
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Ethical Considerations and Change Recipients’ Reactions: ‘It’s Not All About Me’

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Author(s)
Jacobs, Gabriele 
Keegan, Anne E. 
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10226
Date Issued
08 September 2016
Date Available
30T11:52:55Z April 2019
Abstract
An implicit assumption in most works on change recipient reactions is that employees are self-centred and driven by a utilitarian perspective. According to large parts of the organizational change literature, employees’ reactions to organizational change are mainly driven by observations around the question ‘what will happen to me?’ We analysed change recipients’ reactions to 26 large-scale planned change projects in a policing context on the basis of 23 in-depth interviews. Our data show that change recipients drew on observations with three foci (me, colleagues and organization) to assess change, making sense of change as multidimensional and mostly ambivalent in nature. In their assessment of organizational change, recipients care not only about their own personal outcomes, but go beyond self-interested concerns to show a genuine interest in the impact of change on their colleagues and organization. Meaningful engagement of employees in organizational change processes requires recognizing that reactions are not simply ‘all about me’. We add to the organizational change literature by introducing a behavioural ethics perspective on change recipients’ reactions highlighting an ethical orientation where moral motives that trigger change reactions get more attention than is common in the change management literature. Beyond the specifics of our study, we argue that the genuine concern of change recipients for the wellbeing of others, and the impact of the organizations’ activities on internal and external stakeholders, needs to be considered more systematically in research on organizational change.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Journal of Business Ethics
Volume
152
Issue
1
Start Page
73
End Page
90
Copyright (Published Version)
2016 the Authors
Keywords
  • Behavioural ethics

  • Change management

  • Change recipients

  • Change resistance

  • Deontic justice

  • Organizational change...

  • Policing

DOI
10.1007/s10551-016-3311-7
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0167-4544
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
Owning collection
Business Research Collection
Scopus© citations
8
Acquisition Date
Jan 27, 2023
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Views
825
Acquisition Date
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Downloads
252
Acquisition Date
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