Black Employees Matter: Mega-Threats, Identity Fusion, and Enacting Positive Deviance in Organizations

2019 
Despite recognizing the importance of events, researchers have rarely explored the influence of broader societal events on employee experiences and behaviors at work. We integrate perspectives on events and social identities to develop a cross-level theoretical model of the spillover effects of mega-threats, defined as negative large-scale diversity-related episodes that receive significant media attention. With a focus on highly publicized instances of violence enacted against Black Americans by law enforcement as the mega-threat under study, we propose that the coupling of intrapsychic and group level-processes that occur as a result of a mega-threat leads minorities to experience identity fusion that involves the blurring of organizational and social identities, through both affective and cognitive pathways. We further propose that identity fusion compels minorities to engage in task and relational positively deviant behaviors – pro-group voice and relational bridging. We also propose that factors with...
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