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The role of abusive supervision and organizational commitment on employees' information security policy noncompliance intention

Bowen Guan (Tongji University, Shanghai, China)
Carol Hsu (Tongji University, Shanghai, China)

Internet Research

ISSN: 1066-2243

Article publication date: 6 May 2020

Issue publication date: 26 August 2020

1499

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the association between abusive supervision and employees' information security policy (ISP) noncompliance intention, building on affective commitment, normative commitment and continuance commitment. The study also examines the moderating effect of perceived certainty and severity of sanctions on the relationship between the three dimensions of organizational commitment and ISP noncompliance intention.

Design/methodology/approach

Survey methodology was used for data collection through a well-designed online questionnaire. Data was analyzed using the structural equation model with Amos v. 22.0 software.

Findings

This study demonstrates that abusive supervision has a significant, negative impact on affective, normative and continuance commitment, and the three dimensions of organizational commitment are negatively associated with employees' ISP noncompliance intention. Results also indicate that the moderating effect of perceived severity of sanctions is significant, and perceived certainty of sanctions plays a positive moderating role in the relationship between affective commitment and employees' ISP noncompliance intention.

Practical implications

Findings of this research are beneficial for organizational management in the relationships between supervisors and employees. These results provide significant evidence that avoiding abusive supervision is important in controlling employees' ISP noncompliance behavior.

Originality/value

This research fills an important gap in examining employees' ISP noncompliance intentions from the perspective of abusive supervision and the impact of affective, normative and continuance commitment on ISP noncompliance. The study is also of great value for information systems research to examine the moderating role of perceived certainty and severity of sanctions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research is funded in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under the grant 71872129.This study is based on the authors' conference paper “The role of abusive supervision and interactional justice in employee information security policy noncompliance intention” presented at Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems authored by Guan, B., and Hsu, C. (2018).

Citation

Guan, B. and Hsu, C. (2020), "The role of abusive supervision and organizational commitment on employees' information security policy noncompliance intention", Internet Research, Vol. 30 No. 5, pp. 1383-1405. https://doi.org/10.1108/INTR-06-2019-0260

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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