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Seems Fair to Me: Dyadic Leader Consensus Mediates Fairness and Group Performance
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Seems Fair to Me: Dyadic Leader Consensus Mediates Fairness and Group Performance

Dritjon Gruda, Jim McCleskey and Raul Berrios
Small Group Research, Vol.49(2), pp.195-225
01/04/2018

Abstract

leader consensus fairness performance team
Drawing on both relational and shared leadership theory and utilizing social consensus, we examine the relationship between percieved leader fairness, leader consensus (LC), and group performance. We do so by conceptualizing LC as a new way of hypothesizing and examining shared leadership. LC derives from mutual dyadic perceptions of all members in a team. First, we examine perceptions of leader fairness as a possible antecedent of LC. Second, we investigate the mediational effect of dyadic perceptions of leadership (i.e., LC predicts group performance). In two multisource studies using a round-robin design, we demonstrate that when team members reach a clear consensus about their team leader, perceived leader fairness was positively associated with LC. Furthermore, teams who perceived their leaders as fair exhibited higher group performance.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.48 Organizational Behavior
Web of Science research areas
Management
Psychology, Applied
Psychology, Social
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