Handbook of Management Scales/Distributive justice

Description
Four dimensions of organizational justice were measured with a scale developed and validated by Colquitt (2001): procedual, distributive, interpersonal, and informational justice. The scale ranged from 1 (to a very small extent) to 5 (to a very large extent).

Definition
Organizational justice refers to perceptions of fairness in decision-making and resource allocation environments.

Distributive justice refers to the fairness of decision outcomes, and individuals judge it by determining whether the perceived ratio of outcomes to inputs matches those of a comparison other, or whether resource allocations match appropriate norms.

Items

 * Do those outcomes reflect the effort you have put into your work?
 * Are those outcomes appropriate for the work you have completed?
 * Do those outcomes reflect what you have contributed to your work?
 * Are those outcomes justified, given your performance?

Source

 * Colquitt/Rodell (2011): Justice, trust, and trustworthiness: A longitudinal analysis integrating three theoretical perspectives. Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 54, No. 6, pp. 1183–1206

Related Scales

 * Informational justice
 * Interpersonal justice
 * Procedural justice