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Commitment to organizational change: Extension of a three-component model.

2002· article· en· 1,472 citations· W2025761641 on OpenAlex· 10.1037/0021-9010.87.3.474

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Opus teacher head0.062
GPT teacher head0.282
Teacher spread
0.220 · how far apart the two teachers sit on this one work
Validation status
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Abstract

Three studies were conducted to test the application of a three-component model of workplace commitment (J. P. Meyer & N. J. Allen, 1991: J. P. Meyer & L. Herscovitch, 2001) in the context of employee commitment to organizational change. Study 1, conducted with 224 university students, provided preliminary evidence for the validity of newly developed Affective, Continuance, and Normative Commitment to Change Scales. Studies 2 and 3, conducted with hospital nurses (N = 157 and 108, respectively), provided further support for the validity of the three Commitment to Change Scales, and demonstrated that (a) commitment to a change is a better predictor of behavioral support for a change than is organizational commitment, (b) affective and normative commitment to a change are associated with higher levels of support than is continuance commitment, and (c) the components of commitment combine to predict behavior.

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The record

Venue
Journal of Applied Psychology
Topic
Job Satisfaction and Organizational Behavior
Field
Business, Management and Accounting
Canadian institutions
Western University
Funders
Keywords
Organizational commitmentPsychologyContinuanceNormativeSocial psychologyAffective events theoryContext (archaeology)Organizational changeTest (biology)Job satisfactionJob performancePublic relationsPolitical science
Has abstract in OpenAlex
yes