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Organisational justice and employee responses to employment equity

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Title: Organisational justice and employee responses to employment equity
Author: Esterhuizen, Wika
Abstract: The aim of this study was to determine employees' perceptions of the fairness of employment equity practices. It was conducted in an organisation in the Health Services industry, using a Diversity Questionnaire. The sample size was 520 and 245 responses were received, constituting a 47% response rate. Employees' responses were measured along 10 dimensions of employment equity. The unit of analysis was the group according to gender, race, age and job level. Independent t-tests and analysis of variance techniques were used to determine any statistically significant differences in perceptions between groups. Statistically significant differences were found between race groups and job levels. Gender and age did not significantly affect employees' responses. The research concluded that compliance with organisational justice requirements is as important as compliance with legislative requirements. Ultimately, every organisation should adapt its employment equity strategy according to its specific demographic and environmental context.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1726
Date: 2008-06
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  • Unisa ETD [3823]
    Electronic versions of theses and dissertations submitted to Unisa since 2003

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