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A cycle of commitment: The organizational consequences of rituals
Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering ; 84(3-B):No Pagination Specified, 2023.
Article in English | APA PsycInfo | ID: covidwho-2282506
ABSTRACT
From the Walmart Cheer to the Cold Stone Creamery Tip Song, many groups engage in their own rituals (i.e., predefined sequences of symbolic actions). Despite the prevalence of rituals in group settings, the consequences of group rituals have rarely been studied by organizational researchers. This is surprising, given the potential for rituals to influence meaningful organizational outcomes. In this dissertation I develop a comprehensive theory of group rituals, including offering a more refined definition of rituals as compared to similar constructs such as norms, identifying how group rituals influence the key group construct of member commitment, and shedding light on a collateral influence that has not been considered before, the outsiders' perceptions of the group. I aim to show that group rituals physically represent the group's most important values and can consequently influence behavior in group settings. In particular, I examine the relationship between group rituals and group commitment among existing members and prospective members.Among existing group members, I consider the bi-directional relationship between group rituals and group commitment. I suggest that engagement in rituals increases member commitment because rituals stand for the group's values, such that the enactment of rituals makes the group appear as a cohesive entity to members. Furthermore, I suggest that more (vs. less) committed members will be more likely to protect the group's rituals (e.g., punish those who attempt to alter the rituals), ensuring that rituals are faithfully executed over time within the group. In this way, rituals and commitment to the group reinforce each other in a recursive cycle, such that (a) rituals promote member commitment and (b) higher levels of member commitment promote adherence to rituals (yielding a "cycle of commitment").Among prospective group members, I consider how observing the enactment of rituals influences prospective members' own willingness to commit to the group. I suggest that, because group rituals physically represent the group's values, they signal that the group has committed members to outsiders. I propose that perceptions that members are committed to a group can signal an elevated capacity to reach group goals, which will have a positive impact on own willingness to commit among those who share the values of the group (i.e., subjective value congruence) but a weaker or even negative impact among those who do not share the values of the group (i.e., subjective value incongruence). In this way, I theorize rituals promote commitment because rituals attract prospective members who are willing to be committed to the group. This indicates that potential new members who perceive themselves as value-incongruent (such as demographically underrepresented individuals) will be less willing to commit to a group that engages in rituals.The theory of group rituals and group commitment that I propose in this dissertation suggests that rituals promote commitment among existing members and prospective members with congruent values, which can often be beneficial, but, that a somewhat hidden cost is that they can also exclude prospective members who perceive themselves as value-incongruent with the group (such as demographically underrepresented individuals). I conducted eight studies that test the relationship between group rituals and member commitment using a mix of experimental and observational (e.g., longitudinal survey) research. Studies 1 and 2 tested the effect of workgroup rituals on employee commitment among U.S. workers in the context of the COVID- 19 pandemic. Studies 3 and 4 examined national and cultural rituals, investigating whether more (vs. less) committed group members are most likely to protect the group's rituals from people who attempt to alter them. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)
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Collection: Databases of international organizations Database: APA PsycInfo Language: English Journal: Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering Year: 2023 Document Type: Article

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Collection: Databases of international organizations Database: APA PsycInfo Language: English Journal: Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering Year: 2023 Document Type: Article