Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice

Much recent writing on Human Resource Management (HRM) has emphasized the desirability of a committed workforce and the central role of HRM practices in establishing and maintaining employee commitment. However, little research has examined the psychological links of career commitment, perceived o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lew, Tek
Format: Journal Article
Published: Taiwan Institute of Business Administration 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48026
_version_ 1848757995944542208
author Lew, Tek
author_facet Lew, Tek
author_sort Lew, Tek
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Much recent writing on Human Resource Management (HRM) has emphasized the desirability of a committed workforce and the central role of HRM practices in establishing and maintaining employee commitment. However, little research has examined the psychological links of career commitment, perceived organizational support, /trust/and procedural justice according to the social exchange theory which underlines the relationship of HRM practices on employee commitment, especially in the context of higher education in Malaysia. Hence, this review and conceptual paper makes a timely contribution to the research literature by reviewing the relevant literature and recommending propositions to guide future research in this area for faculty members at higher educational institutions in Sarawak, Malaysia. Theoretically, it adopts the social exchange theory by incorporating the mediating effects of career commitment, perceived organizational support, /trust/and procedural justice into the above relationship between high commitment human resource management practices (HRM) and employee commitment.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:36:57Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-48026
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:36:57Z
publishDate 2008
publisher Taiwan Institute of Business Administration
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-480262017-01-30T15:37:00Z Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice Lew, Tek organizational commitment Human resources practices perceived organizational support Much recent writing on Human Resource Management (HRM) has emphasized the desirability of a committed workforce and the central role of HRM practices in establishing and maintaining employee commitment. However, little research has examined the psychological links of career commitment, perceived organizational support, /trust/and procedural justice according to the social exchange theory which underlines the relationship of HRM practices on employee commitment, especially in the context of higher education in Malaysia. Hence, this review and conceptual paper makes a timely contribution to the research literature by reviewing the relevant literature and recommending propositions to guide future research in this area for faculty members at higher educational institutions in Sarawak, Malaysia. Theoretically, it adopts the social exchange theory by incorporating the mediating effects of career commitment, perceived organizational support, /trust/and procedural justice into the above relationship between high commitment human resource management practices (HRM) and employee commitment. 2008 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48026 Taiwan Institute of Business Administration restricted
spellingShingle organizational commitment
Human resources practices
perceived organizational support
Lew, Tek
Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
title Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
title_full Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
title_fullStr Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
title_full_unstemmed Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
title_short Examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (HRM) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
title_sort examining the influence of high commitment human resources practices (hrm) on academics' organizational commitment and mediating effects of career commitment and perceived or organizational support, trust, and procedural justice
topic organizational commitment
Human resources practices
perceived organizational support
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48026