The role of overall justice judgments in organizational justice research
Journal of Applied Psychology. Vol 94(2), pg. 491-500.
"Organizational justice research traditionally focuses on the unique
predictability of different types of justice (distributive, procedural,
and interactional) and the relative importance of these types of
justice on outcome variables. Recently, researchers have suggested
shifting from this focus on specific types of justice to a
consideration of overall justice. The authors hypothesize that overall
justice judgments mediate the relationship between specific justice
facets and outcomes. They present 2 studies to test this hypothesis.
Study 1 demonstrates that overall justice judgments mediate the
relationship between specific justice judgments and employee attitudes.
Study 2 demonstrates the mediating relationship holds for supervisor
ratings of employee behavior. Implications for research on
organizational justice are discussed."