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Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions

In South Africa, blue-collar workers typically operate in labour-intensive work environments where inclusive leadership behaviours are often not viewed as a value-adding tool and where employee willingness to contribute to organisational processes is low. All of which can negatively impact individua...

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Main Author: Larney, Ammaarah
Other Authors: Bagraim, Jeffrey
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Management Studies 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Larney, Ammaarah
author2 Bagraim, Jeffrey
author_browse Bagraim, Jeffrey
Larney, Ammaarah
author_facet Bagraim, Jeffrey
Larney, Ammaarah
author_sort Larney, Ammaarah
collection Thesis
description In South Africa, blue-collar workers typically operate in labour-intensive work environments where inclusive leadership behaviours are often not viewed as a value-adding tool and where employee willingness to contribute to organisational processes is low. All of which can negatively impact individual job performance. Although there is growing literature focussing on inclusive leadership as a critical driver of job performance, there is a scarcity of research understanding this relationship in a South African blue-collar worker context, where this group is considered the backbone of the country's economy. This research argues that understanding the perceptions and behaviours of this group can be worthwhile when addressing the challenges faced by this group and identifying performance-motivating factors. The primary aim of this study was to explore the impact of perceptions of inclusive leadership on the job performance of blue-collar workers utilising three dimensions for performance, including (1) task performance, (2) contextual performance and (3) counterproductive work behaviour. Further, the moderating effect of psychological safety on this relationship was explored to expand on existing literature. Data was collected using a sample of 122 employees from multiple industries using self-report questionnaires. Data was analysed using correlation analysis, regression analysis and moderation analysis. The study's results revealed that the perceived perceptions of inclusive leadership of a blue-collar worker in South Africa positively influenced an employee's contextual performance and decreased the counterproductive work behaviour exhibited by an employee. Further, contrary to earlier studies, the results indicated that inclusive leadership did not significantly correlate with task performance. Additionally, this study revealed that psychological safety significantly correlated with task and contextual performance, whereas there was no significant relationship between psychological safety and counterproductive work behaviours. Despite the significance of these findings, the results were less robust than in previously published research. Lastly, it was observed that psychological safety was not an effective moderator of the relationship between inclusive leadership and job performance. Although these results were inconsistent with previous studies, these findings contribute to the growing body of inclusive leadership literature in South Africa.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:41.762Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42350 Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions Larney, Ammaarah Bagraim, Jeffrey Inclusive Leadership Blue-Collar Workers Psychological Safety Performance Diversity Inclusivity In South Africa, blue-collar workers typically operate in labour-intensive work environments where inclusive leadership behaviours are often not viewed as a value-adding tool and where employee willingness to contribute to organisational processes is low. All of which can negatively impact individual job performance. Although there is growing literature focussing on inclusive leadership as a critical driver of job performance, there is a scarcity of research understanding this relationship in a South African blue-collar worker context, where this group is considered the backbone of the country's economy. This research argues that understanding the perceptions and behaviours of this group can be worthwhile when addressing the challenges faced by this group and identifying performance-motivating factors. The primary aim of this study was to explore the impact of perceptions of inclusive leadership on the job performance of blue-collar workers utilising three dimensions for performance, including (1) task performance, (2) contextual performance and (3) counterproductive work behaviour. Further, the moderating effect of psychological safety on this relationship was explored to expand on existing literature. Data was collected using a sample of 122 employees from multiple industries using self-report questionnaires. Data was analysed using correlation analysis, regression analysis and moderation analysis. The study's results revealed that the perceived perceptions of inclusive leadership of a blue-collar worker in South Africa positively influenced an employee's contextual performance and decreased the counterproductive work behaviour exhibited by an employee. Further, contrary to earlier studies, the results indicated that inclusive leadership did not significantly correlate with task performance. Additionally, this study revealed that psychological safety significantly correlated with task and contextual performance, whereas there was no significant relationship between psychological safety and counterproductive work behaviours. Despite the significance of these findings, the results were less robust than in previously published research. Lastly, it was observed that psychological safety was not an effective moderator of the relationship between inclusive leadership and job performance. Although these results were inconsistent with previous studies, these findings contribute to the growing body of inclusive leadership literature in South Africa. 2025-11-26T11:15:21Z 2025-11-26T11:15:21Z 2025 2025-11-26T10:51:59Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42350 en eng application/pdf School of Management Studies Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Inclusive Leadership
Blue-Collar Workers
Psychological Safety
Performance
Diversity
Inclusivity
Larney, Ammaarah
Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions
title_full Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions
title_fullStr Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions
title_full_unstemmed Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions
title_short Inclusive Leadership and Job Performance: A Study of Blue-Collar Worker Perceptions
title_sort inclusive leadership and job performance a study of blue collar worker perceptions
topic Inclusive Leadership
Blue-Collar Workers
Psychological Safety
Performance
Diversity
Inclusivity
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42350
work_keys_str_mv AT larneyammaarah inclusiveleadershipandjobperformanceastudyofbluecollarworkerperceptions