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Going Above and Beyond: Procedural Justice, Mental Wellbeing, and Organizational Citizenship Among New Prison Officers

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posted on 2025-10-14, 01:19 authored by Julia YesbergJulia Yesberg, L Fenn, E Sargeant
This study explores the relationship between procedural justice, mental wellbeing, and confidence in carrying out organizational citizenship behavior among new prison officers recruited through the Unlocked Graduates Leadership Development Program in England and Wales. We found a direct association between supervisory procedural justice and organizational citizenship, and an indirect association between organizational procedural justice and organizational citizenship, through mental wellbeing. Our results highlight the importance of both supervisors and organizations treating their staff with procedural justice; not only is fair treatment associated with greater mental wellbeing, but it encourages behaviors that extend beyond formal job requirements. Cultivating such behaviors among new prison officers may ultimately improve practices, cultures, and outcomes for people in custody within prisons.

History

Preferred citation

Yesberg, J. A., Fenn, L. & Sargeant, E. (2025). Going Above and Beyond: Procedural Justice, Mental Wellbeing, and Organizational Citizenship Among New Prison Officers. Corrections Policy Practice and Research, ahead-of-print(ahead-of-print), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1080/23774657.2025.2493692

Journal title

Corrections Policy Practice and Research

Volume

ahead-of-print

Issue

ahead-of-print

Publication date

2025-01-01

Pagination

1-12

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2025-04-17

ISSN

2377-4657

eISSN

2377-4665

Language

en