The starting point of Franz Fischer’s dissertation thesis is the
long-established claim to hold people accountable only for what they
can control. Whereas early publications take the application of the
so-called controllability principle as a matter of course, subsequent
works justify the principle’s application with the help of
psychological or social psychological findings: The violation of the
controllability principle is supposed to have negative motivational
effects and thus decreases managers’ effort on the job. Recently,
however, doubts have been raised about the principle’s
meaningfulness. Also, empirical studies show that the principle is
frequently not applied in corporate practice. In short: We do not have
satisfactory knowledge about the effects of the principle’s
application or nonapplication on managers’ mental models and their
behavior. At the same time, we recognize that the question of whether
or not to apply the principle is a major issue for management control
in organizations of all sizes. In view of this, Franz Fischer’s
dissertation thesis contributes to existing literature in at least
three ways: First, Franz Fischer successfully adopts a role theory
perspective in the investigation of cognitive, affective, and
behavioral consequences of (not) applying the controllability
principle in managers’ performance evaluation. Thus, he demonstrates
that role theory enriches a stream of literature that has so far been
dominated by motivational theories. Second, he introduces a new
conceptualization and operationalization of the application of the
controllability principle which depict this latent variable as a
second-order construct.
Les mer
A Role Theory Perspective
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783834960306
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Gabler Verlag
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter