Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/169876
Title: Joking or mocking? Interpersonal justice, positive affect and knowledge behaviours in response to leader humour
Authors: Zoghbi Manrique De Lara, Pablo 
UNESCO Clasification: 531104 Organización de recursos humanos
Keywords: Fairness
Interpersonal Justice
Knowledge Hiding
Knowledge Sharing
Moral Obligation, et al
Issue Date: 2026
Journal: International Journal of Organization Theory and Behavior 
Abstract: Purpose – Knowledge sharing (KS) and knowledge hiding (KH) are not merely prosocial or antisocial acts but strategic decisions regulating the flow of knowledge resources within organizations. While prior research shows that supervisor humour (SH) influences these behaviours, the justice-based mechanisms through which humour shapes knowledge regulation remain unexamined (Bavik et al., 2018; Mishra and Pandey, 2019). Addressing this gap, this study aims to investigate whether interpersonal justice (IJ) mediates the effects of SH on knowledge behaviours and introduces positive affect as a complementary affective lens for fairness appraisals. Design/methodology/approach – Drawing on equity and deontic justice perspectives, we argue that humour activates fairness evaluations that evoke moral obligations to reciprocate or resist. From an affective events perspective, we further propose that positive affect creates an emotional context conducive to justice-based interpretations. Data were collected from 220 full-time employees in Indian firms using validated measures of SH, IJ, KS, KH and positive affect. Findings – Results indicate that IJ mediates the effects of humour on knowledge behaviours. It fully explains the link between affiliative humour and KS and offsets the paradoxical effect of affiliative humour on KH, while mediating the negative effect of aggressive humour on KS but not its positive association with KH. Positive affect did not moderate the humour–IJ link but exerted a consistent direct influence on IJ, suggesting it functions as an affective filter shaping fairness appraisals. Practical implications – Organizations should train supervisors to recognize how humour is ethically interpreted and cultivate positive emotional climates that support fairness-based knowledge exchange. Originality/value – This study advances humour and justice research by extending the joking–mocking distinction into the domain of knowledge regulation. By conceptualizing KS and KH as morally embedded knowledge decision processes rather than discretionary citizenship behaviours, it demonstrates how fairness perceptions determine whether humour fosters KS or is associated with knowledge concealment.
URI: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/169876
ISSN: 1093-4537
DOI: 10.1108/IJOTB-05-2025-0123
Source: International Journal of Organization Theory and Behavior[ISSN 1093-4537], p. 1-20, (Enero 2026)
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