TY - JOUR
T1 - Leveraging fairness and reactance theories to deter reactive computer abuse following enhanced organisational information security policies
T2 - An empirical study of the influence of counterfactual reasoning and organisational trust
AU - Lowry, Paul Benjamin
AU - Posey, Clay
AU - Bennett, Rebecca (Becky) J.
AU - Roberts, Tom L.
PY - 2015/5
Y1 - 2015/5
N2 - Research shows that organisational efforts to protect their information assets from employee security threats do not always reach their full potential and may actually encourage the behaviours they attempt to thwart, such as reactive computer abuse (CA). To better understand this dilemma, we use fairness theory (FT) and reactance theory (RT) to explain why employees may blame organisations for and retaliate against enhanced information security policies (ISPs). We tested our model with 553 working professionals and found support for most of it. Our results show that organisational trust can decrease reactive CA. FT suggests that explanation adequacy (EA) is an important factor that builds trust after an event. Our results also suggest that trust both fully mediates the relationship between EA and CA and partially mediates the relationship between perceived freedom restrictions related to enhanced ISPs and reactive CA. EA also had a strong negative relationship with freedom restrictions. Moreover, organisational security education, training and awareness (SETA) initiatives decreased the perceptions of external control and freedom restrictions and increased EA, and advance notification of changes increased EA. We also included 14 control variables and rival explanations to determine with more confidence what drove reactive CA in our context. Notably, the deterrence theory (DT)-based constructs of sanction severity, certainty and celerity had no significant influence on reactive CA. We provide support for the importance of respectful communication efforts and SETA programmes, coupled with maximising employee rights and promoting trust and fairness to decrease reactive CA. These efforts can protect organisations from falling victim to their own organisational security efforts.
AB - Research shows that organisational efforts to protect their information assets from employee security threats do not always reach their full potential and may actually encourage the behaviours they attempt to thwart, such as reactive computer abuse (CA). To better understand this dilemma, we use fairness theory (FT) and reactance theory (RT) to explain why employees may blame organisations for and retaliate against enhanced information security policies (ISPs). We tested our model with 553 working professionals and found support for most of it. Our results show that organisational trust can decrease reactive CA. FT suggests that explanation adequacy (EA) is an important factor that builds trust after an event. Our results also suggest that trust both fully mediates the relationship between EA and CA and partially mediates the relationship between perceived freedom restrictions related to enhanced ISPs and reactive CA. EA also had a strong negative relationship with freedom restrictions. Moreover, organisational security education, training and awareness (SETA) initiatives decreased the perceptions of external control and freedom restrictions and increased EA, and advance notification of changes increased EA. We also included 14 control variables and rival explanations to determine with more confidence what drove reactive CA in our context. Notably, the deterrence theory (DT)-based constructs of sanction severity, certainty and celerity had no significant influence on reactive CA. We provide support for the importance of respectful communication efforts and SETA programmes, coupled with maximising employee rights and promoting trust and fairness to decrease reactive CA. These efforts can protect organisations from falling victim to their own organisational security efforts.
KW - Counterfactual reasoning
KW - Deterrence
KW - Deterrence theory (DT)
KW - Explanation adequacy (EA)
KW - Fairness theory (FT)
KW - Organisation communication
KW - Organisational trust
KW - Reactance theory (RT)
KW - Reactive computer abuse (CA)
KW - Security
KW - Security education, training, and awareness (SETA)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84926407439&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/pubmetrics.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84926407439&origin=recordpage
U2 - 10.1111/isj.12063
DO - 10.1111/isj.12063
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 1350-1917
VL - 25
SP - 193
EP - 273
JO - Information Systems Journal
JF - Information Systems Journal
IS - 3
ER -