Paper Title
Organizational Justice as a Work Resource and the Mediating Effect of Work Engagement: Focusing on Career Developmental Stages
Abstract
This study attempts to elucidate the mechanism of the relationship between organizational justice, work
engagement, and job satisfaction as perceived by full-time employees in Japan using three-wave data with work engagement as
a mediating variable. In the overall model, distributive and interactional justice showed a significant positive relationship with
work engagement, and work engagement showed a significant positive relationship with job satisfaction. In addition, work
engagement partially mediates the relationship between distributive and interactional justice and job satisfaction. However,
these relationships differed according to the career development stage. We divided the sample into two stages for the additional
analysis: the establishment and maintenance stages, and a multiple-group structural equation modeling analysis was
performed. In the maintenance stage, almost the same tendency as that in the overall model was confirmed. However, in the
establishment stage, none of the three sub concepts of organizational justice affected work engagement, and work engagement
did not have a mediating effect.
Keywords - Organizational Justice, Work Engagement, Job Satisfaction, Career Development Stages