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Organizational Network Analysis×Psychological Empowerment Scale×
ÄmnesområdeOrganisationsbeteendeOrganisationsbeteende
FamiljProcess / pipelineLatent structure
Ursprungsår19841995
UpphovspersonDaniel J. Brass; David Krackhardt; Herminia IbarraGretchen M. Spreitzer; Kenneth W. Thomas & Betty A. Velthouse
TypIntraorganizational social network mapping and position-to-outcome pipelineMultidimensional latent-construct measurement model
UrsprungskällaKrackhardt, D. (1990). Assessing the political landscape: Structure, cognition, and power in organizations. Administrative Science Quarterly, 35(2), 342-369. DOI ↗Spreitzer, G. M. (1995). Psychological empowerment in the workplace: Dimensions, measurement, and validation. Academy of Management Journal, 38(5), 1442-1465. DOI ↗
AliasONA, Intraorganizational Network Analysis, Workplace Social Network Analysis, Advice and Friendship Network AnalysisSpreitzer Empowerment Scale, Psychological Empowerment in the Workplace, Four-Dimensional Empowerment Measure, Workplace Psychological Empowerment
Närliggande33
SammanfattningOrganizational network analysis studies the informal web of relationships — who goes to whom for advice, who is friends with whom, who works with whom — that runs alongside the formal org chart and often determines who actually gets things done. Daniel Brass's 1984 study of a newspaper publishing company showed that an employee's position in workflow, communication, and friendship networks predicted perceived influence and promotion better than formal rank. David Krackhardt's 1990 work added a cognitive twist, demonstrating that accurately perceiving the informal network is itself a source of power. Herminia Ibarra's 1993 study related network centrality to involvement in technical and administrative innovation, distinguishing the network bases of different kinds of influence. Together these works established a pipeline: collect relational data on the organization, compute each member's structural position, and link those positions to power, influence, and innovation. The approach treats the organization as a structure of relationships rather than a hierarchy of boxes.The Psychological Empowerment Scale is Gretchen Spreitzer's measure of empowerment as an internal motivational state, defined by four cognitions: meaning, competence, self-determination, and impact. It operationalizes the interpretive model of Thomas and Velthouse, who in 1990 recast empowerment not as a managerial act of delegating power but as intrinsic task motivation reflected in how workers experience their roles. Spreitzer's 1995 Academy of Management Journal paper developed and validated a multidimensional scale, using confirmatory factor analysis across two samples to show that the four dimensions combine into a higher-order empowerment construct. She then situated empowerment in a nomological network of antecedents and consequences, linking it to managerial effectiveness and innovative behavior. The scale gave the field a concise, validated instrument and established psychological empowerment as a measurable state distinct from structural or relational notions of empowerment.
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ScholarGateJämför metoder: Organizational Network Analysis · Psychological Empowerment Scale. Hämtad 2026-06-25 från https://scholargate.app/sv/compare