The Effect of Union Protest Behavior on Attitudes Toward Unions: An Experimental Analysis

Authors

  • Mel E. Schnake Valdosta State University
  • Michael P. Dumler Illinois State University
  • K. Nathan Moates Valdosta State University

Keywords:

Management, Behavior, Experimental Analysis

Abstract

Student attitudes toward unions were measured at the beginning of a semester. Approximately 90 days later, students were shown a video of union protestors shouting down teachers who had called a press conference to announce they had filed a lawsuit against the union. Following the video, student attitudes toward unions were measured again. The results suggest that union behavior perceived as negative does have a deleterious effect on observer attitudes toward unions. This effect occurs even for observers whose parents were union members.

Downloads

Published

2016-06-06

How to Cite

Schnake, M. E., Dumler, M. P., & Moates, K. N. (2016). The Effect of Union Protest Behavior on Attitudes Toward Unions: An Experimental Analysis. American Journal of Management, 16(2). Retrieved from https://mail.articlegateway.com/index.php/AJM/article/view/1884

Issue

Section

Articles