https://repositorio.cetys.mx/handle/60000/2015| Título : | Business ethics, technology use, and workplace happiness: Gender-based differences. |
| Otros títulos : | Human Resources Management and Services |
| Autor : | Salazar-Altamirano, Mario Alberto Martínez Arvizu, Orlando Josué Mercader, Victor Galván Vela, Esthela |
| Palabras clave : | business ethics;workplace happiness;technology use;gender differences;emerging economies |
| Sede: | Campus Tijuana |
| Fecha de publicación : | abr-2026 |
| Citación : | vol. 8;núm. 1 |
| Resumen : | This study investigates the relationship between business ethics and workplace happiness, explicitly examining the role of technology use as a potential mediator and the moderating effect of gender within organizational contexts in an emerging economy. Using a quantitative, cross-sectional, and non-experimental research design, data were collected from a sample of 367 employees working in Mexican organizations across diverse sectors. The proposed theoretical model was tested through covariance-based structural equation modelling (CB-SEM), complemented by multi-group analysis to explore gender-based differences in the structural relationships. The findings provide robust evidence that business ethics exerts a significant and positive effect on workplace happiness, with this relationship being notably stronger among women, thereby underscoring the relevance of ethical organizational climates for employee well-being. In contrast, technology use neither demonstrated a significant direct effect on workplace happiness nor functioned as a mediating mechanism between ethics and happiness, suggesting that technological tools alone are insufficient to enhance subjective well-being in the absence of a strong ethical foundation. These results indicate that, in emerging organizational contexts, ethical culture and values outweigh the instrumental role of technology in shaping employees’ happiness at work. From a theoretical perspective, the cross-sectional nature of thestudy constrains causal inference, highlighting the need for future longitudinal and cross-cultural research to assess temporal dynamics and contextual generalizability. Practically, the findings emphasize that organizations seeking to enhance workplace happiness should prioritize ethical leadership, fairness, and integrity, while adopting gender-sensitive approaches to digital transformation. Socially, fostering ethical organizational cultures may contribute to more inclusive, emotionally sustainable, andhuman-centered workplaces. Overall, this research offers original value by proposing and empirically validating an integrative model that links business ethics, technology use, and workplace happiness, incorporating gender as a moderating factor within the organizational behaviour literature. |
| metadata.dc.description.url: | https://jhrms.com/index.php/HRMS/article/view/5624/3796 |
| URI : | https://repositorio.cetys.mx/handle/60000/2015 |
| Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos de Revistas |
| Fichero | Descripción | Tamaño | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5624-Article Text-15091-1-10-20260408.pdf | 563.38 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizar/Abrir |
Este ítem está protegido por copyright original |
Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons Licencia Creative Commons
