Careful what you wish for: the primary role of malicious Envy in Predicting Moral Disengagement

dc.coverageDOI: 10.1007/s11031-022-09973-y
dc.creatorRengifo, Manuel
dc.creatorLaham, Simon M.
dc.date2022
dc.date.accessioned05-01-2026 18:13
dc.date.available05-01-2026 18:13
dc.description<p>Envy has been positively associated with both moral disengagement and organizational unethical decision-making. Nevertheless, extant research suffers from a number of limitations that constrain our ability to define the unique links between different forms of envy and moral disengagement. In two studies (N = 419), using a dual conception of envy, we demonstrate that malicious envy has a consistently stronger and unique relationship to moral disengagement than does benign envy. Additionally, from further analyses we suggest that is the harming motivation of malicious envy, and the collateral damage potentially produced by self-improvement motivation of benign envy, the aspects that would relate both types of envy to moral disengagement. Lastly, we show that moral disengagement consistently accounts for the relationship between malicious envy and unethical decision-making. In sum, these findings open different ways to better understand the link between the envious experience, moral disengagement, and unethical decision-making, taking advantage of envy’s dual conceptualization.</p>eng
dc.descriptionEnvy has been positively associated with both moral disengagement and organizational unethical decision-making. Nevertheless, extant research suffers from a number of limitations that constrain our ability to define the unique links between different forms of envy and moral disengagement. In two studies (N?=?419), using a dual conception of envy, we demonstrate that malicious envy has a consistently stronger and unique relationship to moral disengagement than does benign envy. Additionally, from further analyses we suggest that is the harming motivation of malicious envy, and the collateral damage potentially produced by self-improvement motivation of benign envy, the aspects that would relate both types of envy to moral disengagement. Lastly, we show that moral disengagement consistently accounts for the relationship between malicious envy and unethical decision-making. In sum, these findings open different ways to better understand the link between the envious experience, moral disengagement, and unethical decision-making, taking advantage of envy’s dual conceptualization.spa
dc.identifierhttps://investigadores.uandes.cl/en/publications/0a7ac87d-563e-45c6-b908-d48b2a081cb7
dc.languageeng
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
dc.sourcevol.46 (2022) nr.5 p.674-688
dc.subjectEnvy
dc.subjectMoral disengagement
dc.subjectUnethical decision-making
dc.titleCareful what you wish for: the primary role of malicious Envy in Predicting Moral Disengagementeng
dc.typeArticleeng
dc.typeArtículospa
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