The Effects of Machiavellianism and Ethical Environment on Whistle-blowing across Low and High Moral Intensity Settings
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Published:2021
Derek W. Dalton, 2021. "The Effects of Machiavellianism and Ethical Environment on Whistle-blowing across Low and High Moral Intensity Settings", Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research, Khondkar E. Karim, Timothy Fogarty, Robert Rutledge, Robert Pinsker, John Hasseldine, Charles Bailey, Terence Pitre
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Abstract
While Dalton and Radtke (2013) examine the effects of Machiavellianism and an organization's ethical environment within a low moral intensity setting, I examine the effects of Machiavellianism and an organization's ethical environment across both low and high moral intensity settings. Using a sample of 192 MTurk workers (i.e., online labor pool participants from Amazon's Mechanical Turk) and 127 undergraduate accounting students, the results using the full-sample of participants indicate the following: (1) Machiavellianism is negatively associated with whistle-blowing intentions across both low and high moral intensity scenarios; (2) an organization's ethical environment is positively associated with whistle-blowing intentions across both low and high moral intensity scenarios; and (3) in the low moral intensity scenario (but not the high moral intensity scenario), I find an interaction between Machiavellianism and the strength of the ethical environment. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
