Workplace ethics culture and work engagement: The mediating effect of ethical leadership in a developing world context

Article

Workplace ethics culture and work engagement: The mediating effect of ethical leadership in a developing world context

Published in: Journal of Psychology in Africa
Volume 26 , issue 4 , 2016 , pages: 326–333
DOI: 10.1080/14330237.2016.1208928
Author(s): Jeremy Mitonga-Monga Department of Industrial & Organisational Psychology, South Africa , Aden-Paul Flotman Department of Industrial & Organisational Psychology, South Africa , Frans Cilliers Department of Industrial & Organisational Psychology, South Africa

Abstract

This study examined the mediating effect of ethical leadership on the relationship between workplace ethics culture and work engagement among employees in a railway transport organisation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The sample consisted of permanently employed staff in a railway organisation in the DRC (n = 839; females = 32%). The employees were required to complete the Ethical Leadership Scale (ELS), the Ethical Corporate Virtue model (ECV) and the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES). Mediating regression analyses were conducted to predict work engagement from workplace ethics culture, partialling out ethical leadership. The results show that workplace ethics culture had a significantly positive effect on work engagement. The results further indicated that workplace ethics culture, through the mediation of perceived ethical leadership, had a significantly positive effect on the work engagement dimensions of vigour, dedication and absorption. The findings provide evidence that ethical leadership plays a crucial role in shaping workplace ethics culture and employees’ level of work engagement in an emerging country work setting.

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