2015
DOI: 10.1177/0170840615585335
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Repairing Trust in an Organization after Integrity Violations: The Ambivalence of Organizational Rule Adjustments

Abstract: This paper investigates how an organization attempts to repair trust after organizational-level integrity violations by examining the influence of organizational rules on trust repair. We reconstruct the prominent corruption case of Siemens AG, which has faced the greatest bribery scandal in the history of German business. Our findings suggest that tightening organizational rules is an appropriate signal of trustworthiness for external stakeholders to demonstrate that the organization seriously intends to prev… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(68 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
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“…Researchers have described organizational responses to scandals in terms of repairing trust, reputation and legitimacy (Gillespie, Dietz and Lockey, 2014;Gomulya and Boeker, 2014;Pfarrer et al, 2008). Eberl, Geiger and Ablander, 2015). McDonnell and King, 2013;Westphal and Graebner, 2010;Zavyalova et al, 2012).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Researchers have described organizational responses to scandals in terms of repairing trust, reputation and legitimacy (Gillespie, Dietz and Lockey, 2014;Gomulya and Boeker, 2014;Pfarrer et al, 2008). Eberl, Geiger and Ablander, 2015). McDonnell and King, 2013;Westphal and Graebner, 2010;Zavyalova et al, 2012).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, there is no reason why trust repair cannot involve symbolic actions that have limited practical implications but send a strong signal to stakeholders (e.g. Eberl, Geiger and Ablander, 2015). If the audience does not perceive these signals as misleading, then such signalling can help organizations to engender trust.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Some researchers have argued that the use of denial is the most appropriate response to an integrity based trust violation (Eberl et al, 2015). Denial is defined as 'a statement whereby an allegation is explicitly declared to be untrue (i.e., the statement acknowledges no responsibility and hence no regret)' .…”
Section: Integrity Based Recovery Approaches: Denial Reticence and Imentioning
confidence: 99%